BENJAMIN PEIRCE. 
 
 Judge the tree by its frriit. Is this magnificent display of ideality a hitman 
 delusion ? Or is it a divine record? 77ie heavens and the earth have spoken 
 to declare the glory of God. It is not a tale told by an idiot, signifying' nothing. 
 It is the poem of an infinite imagination, signifying immortality. 
 
 BENJAMIN PEIKCE. 
 
 A MEMORIAL COLLECTION, 
 
 BY MOSES KING, 
 i < 
 
 CAMBRIDGE, l88l. MASSACHUSETTS. 
 

 COPYRIGHT, iSSi, BY MOSES KING. 
 
 Stereotyped and Printed 
 
 By Randy Avery, &* Company, 
 
 7/7 Franklin Street, 
 
 Boston. 
 
BEN DELL' INTELLETTO. 
 
 WHENEVER Good of Intellect comes in, 
 Then peace is with us, and a soft control 
 Of all harsh thinking, and but one desire 
 
 Fills every bosom, to forget the din . 
 
 Of outside things and render up the soul 
 To friendship's banquet by an evening fire : 
 Then is the season in this world of sin 
 That brings new strength and keepeth us heart-whole 
 Amid the changes that distress and tire ; 
 
 And when from wisdom we have wanderers been, 
 So that a stupor on the spirit stole 
 From things tmknoum^- with visions dark and dire, 
 In this high presence we restore ourselves 
 More than by all the volumes on our shelves. 
 
 THOMAS WILLIAM PARSONS. 
 
 1 " E stupor m'eran le cose non conte." Purgatorio, xv., 12. 
 
 438280 
 
 K 
 
CONTENTS. 
 
 PORTRAIT OF BENJAMIN PEIRCE 
 
 Frontispiece. 
 
 SONNET 
 
 . Thomas William Parsons, A.M. 
 
 3 
 
 INTRODUCTION 
 
 Moses King ....... 
 
 
 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH 
 
 . Thomas Hill, D.D., LL.D 
 
 7 
 
 NOTES ON LAST ILLNESS, DECEASE, AND FUNERAL 
 
 12 
 
 
 t President and Fellows oj 'Harvard University, 
 
 1 5 
 
 RESOLUTIONS .... 
 
 < Faculty of Harvard College .... 
 
 15 
 
 
 \. American Social Science Association 
 
 1 6 
 
 REPRINTS FROM PUBLICATIONS: 
 
 
 
 Boston Daily Advertiser 
 
 . Editorial 
 
 17 
 
 Boston Daily Advertiser 
 
 Obituary Sketch ....... 
 
 10 
 
 Boston Evening Transcript 
 
 . Editorial 
 
 20 
 
 Boston Journal . 
 
 . Editorial 
 Editorial 
 
 2 I 
 
 Boston Evening Transcript 
 
 . George Thiving. A Poem . . . 
 
 2 3 
 
 Springfield Republican 
 
 . Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, A.B. 
 
 25 
 
 The Nation .... 
 
 . Editorial 
 
 23 
 
 Woman's Journal 
 
 . Thomas WentwortJt Higginson, A.M. 
 
 30 
 
 American Journal of Science 
 
 Leonard Waldo, S.D. . . . . ' 
 
 3* 
 
 Nature 
 
 . Editorial 
 
 34 
 
 Journal of Social Science . 
 
 . Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, A.B. 
 
 35 
 
 Boston Daily Advertiser 
 
 . Thomas William Parsons, A.M. A Poem . 
 
 37 
 
 ADDRESS 
 
 James Freeman Clarke, D.D. .... 
 
 39 
 
 
 Andrew Preston Peabody, D.D.,LL.D. 
 
 4~ 
 
 SERMON . . 
 
 Thomas Hill D D LL D 
 
 48 
 
 SERMON 
 
 . Cyrus Aitgnstus Bartol,D.D. .... 
 
 56 
 
 POEM 
 
 . Oliver Wendell Holmes, M.D., LL.D. . 
 
 63 
 
INTRODUCTION. 
 
 THIS little volume is no biography of the great man who a short 
 time ago closed an active career of almost fifty years in the service, 
 nominally of astronomy and mathematics at Harvard University, but 
 practically of science and religion throughout the world. Its contents 
 but feebly reflect the life of one who ranks among the few men whose 
 names have been imperishably recorded in the annals of science and 
 religion in this century. At best it can only serve as a convenient 
 reference-book for the future biographer of the late professor. 
 
 Although having neither the ability to appreciate the extraordinary 
 intellect of Professor Peirce, nor an acquaintance long enough to 
 write a personal narrative of his life, I could have re-written what 
 had already appeared in print, and thus have issued a so-called biog- 
 raphy; but it seemed best simply to gather in permanent and con- 
 venient form such printed matter as was occasioned by the death of 
 Professor Peirce, correcting such errors as had crept in, omitting, as 
 far as possible, such parts as were repetitions, and adding a few notes 
 on his last illness, and a brief account of the funeral. 
 
 My acquaintance with Professor Peirce was very short, yet long 
 enough to make me always regard him as one of my kindest friends. 
 At a time when there were quite different opinions among the officers 
 of the University as to the propriety of my issuing T/w Harvard 
 Register, he, who for almost half a century had devoted himself to the 
 institution, unhesitatingly came forward in support of the new enter- 
 prise. He aided it pecuniarily, offered many valuable suggestions, 
 indorsed it publicly, and promised to contribute occasional articles. 
 To him I am indebted for the last piece of work that he was permitted 
 to write for publication. It was his article on "The Intellectual 
 
Organization of Harvard University." Although brief, it contains 
 many thoughts that will remain as permanent maxims. It gives in a 
 convincing manner some indisputably correct opinions on the duties 
 of the students, instructors, and administrative officers of a true 
 university. 
 
 His kindnesses were experienced also by other students ; and, 
 whatever may be said of his failure to be instructive to those who 
 could not comprehend his teaching, no one ever complained that he 
 was severe upon those who failed to profit by it, while there are many 
 to give hearty praise for his sympathy with them in their difficulties 
 with their college work. He realized that a student's career at col- 
 lege, especially where all studies are prescribed, is not necessarily an 
 infallible sign of his success in later life, and kindly interceded with 
 the faculty in behalf of many students who were unable to master 
 their prescribed work. 
 
 It is therefore chiefly from a feeling of sincere gratitude to one of 
 the noblest men that it has ever been my lot to meet, that I have 
 issued this simple compilation. M. K. 
 
 CAMBRIDGE, January, 1881. 
 
 FROM PLATO. 
 
 ivl &OIG 
 vvv 6e Oavuv ha/un ei? "EaTrepoc ev 
 
 Peirce 1 among living men thou morning star ! 
 Shin'st Hesperus now where souls departed are. 
 
 OCT. 9, 1880. T. W. PARSONS. 
 
BENJAMIN PEIRCE. 
 
 BY EX-PRESIDENT THOMAS HILL, D.D., LL.D. 
 
 [From The Harvard Register, May, 1880.] 
 
 No name has shed a more brilliant lustre over the academic department 
 of Harvard College, during the last thirty-five years, than that of Benjamin 
 Peirce, of the class of 1829. He was born at Salem, April 4, 1809; was 
 appointed tutor in 1831, University professor of mathematics and natural 
 philosophy in 1833, Perkins professor of astronomy and mathematics in 1842. 
 Tutor Henry Flynt (1693) ^ s ^e only person ever connected with the College 
 for a longer period. From 1836 to 1846 he issued a series of text-books on 
 geometry, trigonometry, algebra, and "curves, functions, and forces." They 
 were so full of novelties that they never became widely popular, except, per- 
 haps, the trigonometry ; but they have had a permanent influence upon math- 
 ematical teaching in this country ; most of their novelties have now become 
 common-places in all text-books. The introduction of infinitesimals or of 
 limits into elementary books ; the recognition of direction as a fundamental 
 idea ; the use of Hassler's definition of a sine as an arithmetical quotient, 
 free from entangling alliance with the size of the triangle ; the similar deliv- 
 erance of the expression of derivative functions and differential co-efficients 
 from the superfluous introduction of infinitesimals ; the fearless and avowed 
 introduction of new axioms, when confinement to Euclid's made a demon- 
 stration long and tedious, in one or two of these points European writers 
 moved simultaneously with Peirce, but in all he was an independent inventor, 
 and nearly all are now generally adopted. 
 
 All his writings are characterized by singular directness and conciseness, 
 and particularly by a happy choice of notation, a point of great impor- 
 tance to the mathematician, lessening not only his mechanical labor in writing, 
 but also his intellectual labor in grasping and handling the difficult concep- 
 tions of his science. 
 
 His text-books were, also complained of for their condensation, as being 
 therefore obscure ; but under competent teachers their brevity was the cause 
 of their superior lucidity. In the Waltham High School his books were 
 
used for many years, and the graduates attained thereby a clearer and more 
 useful applicable knowledge of mathematics than was given at any other 
 high school in this country ; nor did they find any difficulty in mastering 
 even the demonstration of Arbogast's Polynomial Theorem, as presented by 
 Peirce. The latter half of the volume on the Integral Calculus, full of 
 marks of a great analytical genius, is the only part of all his text-books 
 really too difficult for students of average ability. 
 
 Gill's Mathematical Miscellany contained many contributions which showed 
 in a singular light the Harvard professor's power. For example, in the 
 issues for May and November, 1839, he solved, by a system of co-ordinates 
 of his own devising, several problems concerning the involutes and evolutes 
 of curves, which would probably have proved impregnable by any other 
 mode of approach. 
 
 During the year 1842, Professors Peirce and Levering published a " Cam- 
 bridge Miscellany of Mathematics and Physics," in which Peirce gave an 
 analytical solution of the motion of a top, a criticism of Espy's theory of 
 storms, etc. About tire same time he adapted the epicycles of Hipparchus 
 to the analytical forms of modern science ; and the method was used by 
 Lovering in meteorological discussions communicated to the American 
 Academy. 
 
 The comet of 1843 gave Professor Peirce the opportunity by a few striking 
 lectures in Boston to arouse an interest which led to the foundation of the 
 Observatory at Cambridge ; and by his discussions of the orbit with Sears 
 C. Walker, he and that remarkable computer were brought to mutual ac- 
 quaintance, and prepared for the still more important services to astronomy 
 which they rendered after the discovery of Neptune. This planet was dis- 
 covered in September, 1846, in consequence of the request of Leverrier to 
 Galle that he should search the zodiac in the neighborhood of longitude 325 
 for a theoretical cause of certain perturbations of Uranus. But Peirce 
 showed that the discovery was a happy accident ; not, that Leverrier's calcu- 
 lations had not been exact, and wonderfully laborious, and deserving of the 
 highest honor ; but because there were, in fact, two very different solutions 
 of the perturbations of Uranus possible : Leverrier had correctly calculated 
 one, but the actual planet in the sky solved the other ; and the actual planet 
 and Leverrier's ideal one lay in the same direction from the earth only in 
 1846. Peirce's labors upon this problem, while showing him to be the peer 
 of any astronomer, were in no way directed against Leverrier's fame as a 
 mathematician : on the contrary, he testified in the strongest manner that he 
 
had examined and verified Leverrier's labors sufficiently to establish their 
 marvellous accuracy and minuteness, as well as their herculean amount. 
 
 A few years later, 1851 to 1855, Peirce published the remarkable results of 
 his labors upon Saturn's rings. Professor G. P. Bond had seen the ring 
 divide itself and re-unite, and had thereby been led to show by computation 
 from Laplace's formula: that the ring could not be solid. Upon this Peirce 
 investigated the problem anew, and showed that the ring, if fluid, could not 
 be sustained by the planet ; that satellites could not sustain a solid ring, but 
 that sufficiently large and numerous satellites could sustain a fluid ring, and 
 that the actual satellites of Saturn are sufficient. 
 
 Jn 1849 he was appointed consulting astronomer to the American Epheme- 
 ris and Nautical Almanac, and rendered efficient service in bringing that 
 publication to its condition of honorable authority; particularly in the lunar 
 tables which he furnished, in his treatment of Neptune, and various methods 
 of computation. He also assisted Professor Bache in the Coast Survey, and 
 was, for many years, of great service in that important national work, before 
 he was himself appointed superintendent in 1867. His calculations of the 
 occultations of the Pleiades were very laborious and exact, and furnished an 
 accurate means of studying the form, both of the earth and her satellite ; his 
 criterion for rejecting doubtful observations is an ingenious and valuable ex- 
 tension of the law of probabilities to its own correction; his detection of the 
 mental error of lurking personal preferences for individual digits is a curious 
 specimen of that acuteness of observation which characterizes his own mind. 
 
 He held the office of superintendent of the Coast Survey from 1867 to 
 1874. Coming after such able men as Hassler and Bache to an office which 
 required not only familiarity with mathematics and physics, but also great 
 knowledge of men and executive ability, he was not found wanting, but 
 showed that the theory of the Stoics will sometimes hold good to-day, the 
 really great man shows himself great by any and every standard. The Coast 
 Survey has, since the year 1845, steadily advanced in public favor ; and its 
 work commands the highest respect among all men competent to judge 
 throughout the world, as being not only of direct service to the nation, but 
 as making constant valuable additions to science. 
 
 Many monographs, bearing the marks of Peirce's individuality and pecul- 
 iar power, have been read by him before various academies, societies, and 
 institutions; but only the results of most of them have ever been furnished 
 for publication. Among these may be mentioned an investigation of the 
 forms of stable equilibrium for a fluid in an extensible sack floating in anoth- 
 
er fluid, being an a priori embryology. Also, the motions of a billiard-ball, 
 an instance in nature of discontinuity, when the ball leaves its curve, and 
 goes on a tangent ; another, the motion of a sling, curious from the immense 
 variety of forms comprised under exceedingly simple uniform conditions. 
 
 In 1857 he published a volume summing up the most valuable and most 
 brilliant results of analytical mechanics, interspersing them with original 
 results of his own labor. A year or two later an American student in Ger- 
 many asked one of the most eminent professors there, what books he would 
 recommend on analytical mechanics : the answer was instantaneous, " There 
 is nothing fresher and nothing more valuable than your own Peirce's recent 
 quarto." In this volume occurs a singular instance of a characteristic which 
 I have already mentioned. Peirce assumes as self-evident that a line which 
 is wholly contained upon a limited surface, but which has neither beginning 
 nor end on that surface, must be a curve re-entering upon itself. By means 
 of this hyper-Euclidean axiom he reduces a demonstration which would 
 otherwise occupy half a dozen pages to a dozen lines. 
 
 In 1870, through the ''labors of love" of persons engaged on the Coast 
 Survey, an edition of a hundred lithographed copies was published, of certain 
 communications to the "National Academy" upon "Linear Associative 
 Algebra." In 1852 Hamilton of Dublin had published his wonderful volume 
 on Quaternions ; and this had been followed by various other attempts to 
 create an algebra more useful in geometrical and physical research than the 
 co-ordinates of Descartes. Ordinary algebra deals only with quantitative 
 relations; and the object of the Arithmetic of Lines, and of Cartesian 
 co-ordinates, had been to reduce distances and directions to a comparison of 
 quantity. But Hamilton introduced quality also ; and his algebra employed 
 the dimensions of space, unchanged and essentially diverse, in computation. 
 His imitators and followers had not succeeded in improving, or in really 
 adding to, his methods. But Peirce, in these communications to the Acade- 
 my, attacks the problem, according to his wont, with astonishing breadth 
 of view, and boldness of plan. He begins with a definition of mathematics, 
 shows the variety of processes included in his definition, passes then to its 
 symbols, shows the nature of qualitative and of quantitative algebras, and of 
 those which combine the two, and says he will investigate the general sub- 
 ject of algebra. First, he limits himself in this volume to algebras handling 
 less than seven distinct qualities ; that is, not exceeding six. The notation 
 is then discussed, and the necessary enlargements and modifications of the 
 algebraic signs and symbols are clearly denned. The distributive and asso- 
 
ciative principles in multiplication are adopted, but not the commutative : 
 and he confines himself to linear algebras ; that is, to those in which every 
 expression is reducible to an algebraic sum of terms each expressive of a 
 single quality. After a full discussion of the general results which must be 
 found in all algebras under these conditions, he begins with single algebras, 
 then double, then triple, and so on up to sextuple, making nearly a hundred 
 algebras which he shows to be possible, and of which he gives the great fea- 
 tures. There are almost no comments upon them ; and it is only by a patient 
 examination for himself that the reader discovers, that, of all these numer 
 ous algebras, only three have ever been heard of before. First, of the two 
 single algebras we have one, which is the common algebra, including its sim- 
 pler form of arithmetic. Secondly, of the three double algebras we have 
 one, viz., the Calculus of Leibnitz and Newton. Thirdly, of over twenty 
 quadruple algebras, only one has been used, the Quaternions of Hamilton. 
 Such is a brief abstract of this book of marvellous prophecy. The most note- 
 worthy things which he has done since its publication are a course of Lowell 
 lectures, given about a year ago, on " Ideality in Science," and a series of 
 communications to the American Academy, which, it is understood, is still 
 to be continued. In the Lowell lectures he embodies many of his views on 
 philosophy and religion which are peculiarly dear to him, and are always lis- 
 tened to with profound interest, even by those of less religious nature. In 
 the communications to the Academy he is discussing, with all his wonted 
 power, questions of cosmical physics, and particularly theories concerning 
 the source and supply of the sun's heat. 
 
 While Professor Peirce has the tenacity of grasp, and power of endurance, 
 which enable him to make the most intricate and tedious numerical compu- 
 tations, he is still more distinguished by intensity and fervor of action in 
 every part of his nature, an enthusiasm for whatever is noble and beautiful 
 in the world or in art, in fiction or real life ; an exalted moral strength and 
 purity ; a glowing imagination which soars into the seventh heavens ; an in- 
 sight and a keenness of external observation which makes the atom as grand 
 to him as a planet ; a depth of reverence which exalts him while he abases 
 himself. 
 
NOTE. 
 
 AT the time the foregoing excellent sketch was written, Professor 
 Peirce seemed to be unusually well. For several years the state of 
 his health had occasionally caused his friends some anxiety, but they 
 now thought that it was well established again. The time had by no 
 means come when those who knew him, either in his public or his 
 private life, could find reason to feel that he had begun to approach 
 the end of this world's usefulness or enjoyment. He was still in the 
 fulness of his faculties, of his judgment, of his interests, and of his 
 affections ; and seemed to be entering on a new period of vigorous, 
 fresh, and serene life. During the winter of 1879-80 and the ensuing 
 spring, he was active in many directions. He was the chief mover in 
 a series of weekly scientific meetings among the corps of the Univer- 
 sity, in which he not only sought to stimulate a searching discussion 
 of the questions of cosmical physics he was himself enthusiastically 
 studying, but warmly welcomed the topics which others brought for- 
 ward, with the unfailing interest he always showed in every true line 
 of investigation. With the assistance of a favorite pupil, he resumed 
 but too earnestly (for the zest with which he threw himself into this 
 work brought on his first attack) the study of the comet of 1843, an d 
 undertook the complete inquiry into all its successive appearances 
 from the beginning of astronomical records, incited thereto by hearing 
 of the remarkable observation, strongly recalling that comet, made in 
 South America by his friend Dr. Benjamin Apthorp Gould. He was 
 still deeply interested in his work of teaching, and had announced an 
 important new course on cosmical physics for the current year ; and 
 his teaching, whatever its defects in the view of the mere pedagogue, 
 and even from a higher standpoint, had in it elements of originality, 
 
of power, of rapid vigor, of profundity, of intrinsic clearness (some- 
 times marred, it is true, by superficial obscurity), of unfaltering free- 
 dom, and of life, which no instruction, proceeding from less remarka- 
 ble intellect or learning, could approach. In his prime he was the 
 centre of an influence which went to the starting of many a since dis- 
 tinguished scientific career ; and he was happy in having, to the last, 
 pupils who understood the greatness of his teaching, and appreciated 
 and loved his character. 
 
 While he thus seemed to be renewing his scientific activity, his 
 interest in literature, art, and society, appeared also greater than ever. 
 He repeated his Lowell Lectures in Baltimore, and one of them in 
 New York, and heartily enjoyed both the social pleasures of his visit, 
 and the interest he was able to awake. He entered, with delightful 
 freshness, into the enjoyment of the exquisite presentations of Shak- 
 speare's heroines which adorned our stage last spring, and of the 
 noble and deeply imagined characterizations of the great actor who 
 followed ; in honor of whom, and of that musician of delicate per- 
 ceptions and fascinating presence whose life has since closed, his 
 last hospitality was offered. He was eager to let no opportunity go 
 by of rendering a service or a gratification to a friend ; and he took 
 every occasion of reviving with cordiality friendships and associations 
 of long-past days. But it is not unlikely that this increased activity 
 was but a pressing forward, enforced by a presentiment of the short- 
 ness of the time, and that all the while he was himself looking with 
 steady eye to the approaching end. 
 
 In. May Professor Peirce began to pass under the shadow of the 
 cloud of his last illness. For some weeks there was little serious fear 
 that it was a shadow not destined to lift. He was first confined to his 
 chamber on the 25111 of June ; and from that time his slowly failing 
 condition was hardly relieved even by any deceptive appearances 
 of improvement. He died on the morning of Wednesday, Oct. 6. 
 Distinguished throughout his life by his freedom from the usual ab- 
 horrence of death, which he never permitted himself either to mourn 
 when it came to others, or to dread for himself, he kept this character- 
 istic temper to the end, through all the sad changes of his trying ill- 
 
ness; and, two days before he ceased to breathe, it struggled into 
 utterance in a few faintly-whispered words, which expressed and ear- 
 nestly inculcated a cheerful and complete acceptance of the will of 
 God with regard to him. 
 
 The funeral took place on Saturday, Oct. 9, at Appleton Chapel, 
 and was the occasion of an impressive gathering of people of great 
 and various mark. The attendance included a very full representa- 
 ion of the various faculties and governing boards of the University; 
 a large deputation of officers of the United-States Coast and Geodetic 
 Survey, headed by the superintendent and the chief assistant ; dele- 
 gations of eminent professors from Yale College and the Johns Hop- 
 kins University ; many members of the class of 1829 ; and a great 
 number of other friends of the deceased. The pall-bearers were : 
 
 President Charles W. Eliot. 
 
 Ex-President Thomas Hill, Pastor of the First 
 Parish Church, Portland, Me. 
 
 Capt. C. P. Patterson, Superintendent of the 
 United-States Coast Survey. 
 
 Professor J. J. Sylvester, of the Johns Hop- 
 kins University. 
 
 Hon. J. Ingersoll Bowditch. 
 
 Professor Simon Newcomb, Superintendent 
 of the American Ephemeris and Nauti- 
 cal Almanac. 
 
 Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes. 
 
 Professor Joseph Levering. 
 
 Dr. Morrill Wyman. 
 
 A beautiful and simple service was conducted by the Rev. A. P. 
 Peabody and the Rev. James Freeman Clarke ; nor could any thing 
 be more congenial to the sentiments of those who were familiar with 
 Professor Peirce's own character and tastes than the expression that 
 was given in music, and which nothing but music could so fully give, 
 to the feeling of the hour, through the chant and the organ, and by 
 one moving voice, inspired by memories of affectionate interest and 
 genial sympathy and admiration to its noblest utterance. 
 
 It was a day brimming with the sweet magnificence of autumn, 
 its generous and tender gladness in truest harmony with the bright, 
 rich, and ever-youthful nature of him whose image filled so many 
 hearts. X. Y. Z. 
 
RESOLUTIONS. 
 
 ACTION OF THE PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS. 
 
 AT a meeting of the President and Fellows of Harvard College, 
 Oct. n, 1880, the following entry was made upon the record : 
 
 "The President and Fellows desire to express their deep regret at the 
 death of Benjamin Peirce, Perkins Professor of Astronomy and Mathemat- 
 ics, on the 6th inst., in the seventy-second year of his age, and the fiftieth 
 of his service as a College teacher. 
 
 "The University must long lament the loss of an intelligence so rare, an 
 experience so rich, and a personal influence so strong, as his. 
 
 "As a teacher, he inspired young minds with a love of truth, and touched 
 them with his own enthusiasm ; as a man of science, his attainments and 
 achievements and his public services have reflected honor upon the Univer- 
 sity and the country." 
 
 ACTION OF THE FACULTY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. 
 
 At a meeting of the Faculty held Nov. 15, 1880, it was voted to 
 enter the following on the Faculty Records : 
 
 "The Faculty of Harvard College desire to put on record their sense of 
 the loss which they, individually and collectively, have sustained in the death 
 of Professor Benjamin Peirce, in the fiftieth year of his service as a teacher 
 and as a member of this body. 
 
 "Gifted with an extraordinary intuition in his favorite science, he was 
 eager to lead where few were able to follow ; but all felt the inspiration of 
 his profound thought and earnest utterance. With full consciousness of his 
 own powers, he over-estimated the abilities of others. Those who came into 
 intimate contact with him were attracted by the simplicity of his nature and 
 
elevated by the nobility of his mind. His more public services to science 
 and to the country have given him a wider reputation than belongs to the 
 teacher ; but the College has a portion in the heritage of all her illustrious 
 
 ACTION OF THE AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE 
 ASSOCIATION. 
 
 At a meeting of the executive committee of the American Social 
 Science Association, held at Boston, Oct. 27, 1880, President Way- 
 land in the chair, the following resolutions were adopted, and entered 
 on the records of the Association: 
 
 Resolved, That the American Social Science Association, in the death of 
 Professor Peirce, mourns the loss of a distinguished member, who added to 
 those special gifts and attainments by which he was known to the world, a 
 broad interest in all forms of human knowledge, and all subjects of scientific 
 research, which made him in a peculiar manner the representative of social 
 science among those whose function was education and the general culture 
 of mankind. Coming to our main work late in life, and impelled by his sym- 
 pathy with all the forward movements of human intelligence, he brought with 
 him and imparted to others that deep religious enthusiasm which is so essen- 
 tial in these universal studies, and which gives to the matured wisdom of age 
 its most attractive aspect. 
 
 Resolved, That the official service of Professor Peirce, in guiding and carry- 
 ing forward the educational work of this Association, has been seasonable and 
 important ; and that his death leaves vacant a place in its councils which we 
 shall vainly seek to fill ; while his example remains in memory,. a cordial en- 
 couragement to youth, and a steady light for the experience of age. 
 
 16 
 
REPRINTS FROM PUBLICATIONS. 
 
 FROM THE BOSTON DAILY ADVERTISER, OCT. 7. 
 
 AN editorial notice in the Boston Daily Advertiser, on the morning 
 of Oct. 7, said, 
 
 "The death of Professor Benjamin Peirce is a great and national loss ; for 
 he was the Nestor of American mathematicians, and the historic transition 
 from the illustrious Nathaniel Bowditch to the present generation of mathe- 
 matical minds. And among these the son of the deceased, Mr. Charles 
 Sanders Peirce, is not so much the rising hope as he is the worthy heir of 
 great traditions. If Newton and Gauss are the greatest of modern mathe- 
 maticians, the late Professor Peirce's merits will rank with the marvellous 
 achievements of the Bernoullis, Euler, and Laplace. For not only has he 
 extended the field of mathematics, he has also re-surveyed the larger part of 
 the field, and by the introduction of new methods enabled his successors to 
 cover more ground in less time than was previously possible. This is shown, 
 even in his elementary treatises, in his treatise on analytical mechanics of 
 1857, and in his 'Linear Associative Algebra' of 1870. Had he chosen to 
 publish a selected edition of his mathematical works satisfactory to himself, 
 there is reason to believe that for centuries to come the world would not 
 willingly let them die. The layman's impression, that a science as precise 
 and formal as mathematics is necessarily dry and abstract, is not borne out 
 by Professor Peirce's works and his personal character. Both were to a 
 remarkable degree imaginative, speculative, and emotional. Both were filled 
 with that reverence which is the almost uniform result of having felt the 
 living pulse of everlasting truths. Nor has Professor Peirce's life been 
 spent in learned retirement. lie was among the teachers at Round Hill ; 
 since 1831 he has been one of the bright, particular stars of Harvard Col- 
 lege ; the Harvard Observatory was founded through his help ; he was next 
 to Bache the strongest man connected with the United-States Coast Survey ; 
 he helped in making the American Ephemeris an authority rarely challenged ; 
 
he contributed to the transactions of the National Academy, the American 
 Academy, and other learned societies ; and he was of value wheresoever he 
 chose to mingle with his fellow-citizens. For as was his science, true and 
 pure, so was the man." 
 
 In the news department of the same paper appeared an obituary 
 sketch of Professor Peirce. The following extracts are taken from it, 
 a few slight corrections having been made : 
 
 BENJAMIN PEIRCE was the third of the four children of Benjamin Peirce 
 and his wife, a sister of the Rev. Dr. Nichols of Portland. The elder 
 Mr. Peirce graduated at Harvard in 1801, receiving the highest honors of his 
 class, and from 1826 to 1831 he was the college librarian: he wrote also the 
 history of the College from 1639 to the beginning of the American Revolution. 
 Mr. Benjamin Peirce the younger graduated from Harvard with George T. 
 Bigelow, W. H. Channing, B. R. Curtis, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and James 
 Freeman Clarke, in the class of 1829. While an undergraduate he was a 
 pupil of Dr. Nathaniel Bowditch, who made the prediction that young Peirce 
 would become one of the leading mathematicians of this century. After 
 having taught two years at Round Hill, Northampton, he was appointed in 
 1831, at the same time with Dr. A. P. Peabody, tutor in mathematics at Har- 
 vard, and ever since has been actively connected with the College. He be- 
 came University professor of mathematics and natural philosophy in 1833, 
 and was appointed to his present position, Perkins professor of mathematics 
 and astronomy, in 1842. From 1833 to 1846 he issued a series of school- 
 books on geometry, algebra, and "Curves, Functions, and Forces," which have 
 had a lasting effect upon the methods of teaching in this country. The 
 author acted independently in the introduction of infinitesimals into element- 
 ary books, and supplanted many traditional methods in mathematics by 
 concise and axiomatic definitions and demonstrations of his own invention. 
 He surpassed other mathematicians particularly in the choice of notation, 
 which enabled his mind to carry its power of abstract reasoning to a higher 
 degree by reducing mental lab'or. All his writings contain novelties which 
 bear the stamp of a powerful individuality. A curious instance of this is 
 his discovery of a lurking preference in the mind for particular fractions that 
 occur in computation, and his adoption of a means of avoiding the error 
 naturally resulting from such preference. Another remarkable, instance of 
 
 18 
 
his acute perception is his criterion for rejecting discordant observations. 
 Here, too, he found the mind was liable to be influenced by an unconscious 
 preference, and so made his selection from the several observations by a new 
 application of the mathematical law of probability. . . . 
 
 In 1852 were printed Peirce's lunar tables, to be used in making computa- 
 tions for the Nautical Almanac, with which publication Professor Peirce was 
 long connected as consulting astronomer. Though intended to serve only a 
 temporary purpose, till the long-expected tables of Hansen should make 
 their appearance, these tables have ever since been retained in use as giving 
 results quite as accurate as are obtained by the aid of Hansen's computa- 
 tions. From 1852 to 1856 Professor Peirce made a laborious investigation 
 into the nature of Saturn's rings, and demonstrated that they are not solid, 
 but fluid, sustained by the planet's satellites. In j^jfappeared " A System 
 of Analytic Mechanics," consolidating "the latest researches of the great 
 geometers and their most exalted forms of thought," but containing brilliant 
 results of the author's own labor. From 1867 to 1874 he was superintendent 
 of the United-States Coast Survey; and in 1870, with the help of his asso- 
 ciates, there was published an edition of one hundred copies of certain papers 
 communicated to the National Academy upon "Linear Associative Algebra." 
 This work is an examination and enlargement of the new mathematical 
 science of quaternions. This science, in which distances and directions are 
 measured, not, as in ordinary algebra, by quantity, but by units of quality as 
 well, was developed by Hamilton in 1852, and is considered a most remarkable 
 achievement. Professor Peirce first explains the nature of qualitative and 
 quantitative algebras, and then shows that there may be a score or more of 
 algebras of distinct qualitative units. Among the important original re- 
 sults of his labor is a determination of the forms of equilibrium for a fluid 
 ir. an extensible sack in another fluid, and a theory of comets' tails. For the 
 past ten years of his life he published less. He withdrew more and more 
 from active work in the College, leaving his son, Professor James Mills 
 Peirce, to take his place in the class-room, while he gave himself up to the 
 enjoyment of the philosophic and religious beliefs which hi* lifelong pursuit 
 of science had unfolded and made dear to him. . . . 
 
 At the time of the publication of his " System of Analytic Mechanics," 
 Professor Peirce announced that the volume would be followed by three 
 others, entitled respectively, "Celestial Mechanics," " Potential Physics," and 
 "Analytic Morphology." In them would have been expected some reference 
 to theology, but they were never published. In his recent lectures on " Ideal- 
 
ity in Science," however, are embodied many of his views on philosophy and 
 religion ; and even in such a purely technical work as the Analytic Me- 
 chanics crop out references to spiritual things. He has, says ex-President 
 Hill, "too much intellectual honesty to conceal any of his views." Starting 
 with the idea that force resides in the will, he concludes, through the con- 
 sciousness of freedom and efficiency in himself, that motion is a manifestation 
 of force ; and the conception of force outside of himself leads him to a 
 belief in an all-powerful and conscious will which is the seat of that force. 
 " Every portion of the material universe," writes Professor Peirce, "is per- 
 vaded by the same laws of mechanical action which are incorporated into the 
 very constitution of the human mind." The universe, then, was made for 
 the instruction of man. With this belief he approached the study of natural 
 phenomena not in the spirit of a critic, but reverently in the mood of a sym- 
 pathizing reader; and the lesson he reads is, "There is but one God, and 
 science is the knowledge of Him." . . . 
 
 FROM THE BOSTON EVENING TRANSCRIPT, OCT. 7. 
 
 PROFESSOR PEIRCE was a scientific man who had that noblest and most 
 valuable and productive of gifts, the scientific imagination. Learning did not 
 choke up, but watered, the springs of original thought in him. No surer 
 mark of rare genius can be named. Mathematics were employed by him to 
 clarify the profoundest delvings into the mysteries of mind and the most 
 exalted speculations upon religious beliefs. He could grasp instantly and 
 hold firmly the most general conception of every thing and any thing ; and 
 his mind was of that genial, fervid kind, that is open and impressible on all 
 sides, and did open with pleased wonder and curiosity to every thing in 
 nature, art, and society, as well as science. His lectures here last winter on 
 " Ideality in Science " displayed well the highest and noblest characteristics 
 of his mind ; and it is pleasant to remember that he saw and knew that they 
 were appreciated. His active service in the University and in his chosen 
 field of science was finished ; but the influence of his presence was some- 
 thing that will be missed, and leave a void not to be filled. Long may it be 
 ere the same must be said of the distinguished men of his generation who 
 
with him have made the name and consideration of this literary community 
 of Cambridge and Boston what they are, and whose successors are not yet 
 visible among us ! 
 
 FROM THE BOSTON JOURNAL, OCT. 7. 
 
 THE life of a professor generally displays few strange or startling inci- 
 dents ; and the record of Professor Peirce's life must be sought in what he 
 was, rather than in what happened to him. As a mathematician he attained 
 the first rank ; and he had few, if any, companions in his highest intellectual 
 labors. He was noted for his directness and conciseness of demonstration, 
 and by the intuitive insight with which he approached the most difficult 
 problems. When engaged upon any difficult question his entire energies 
 were bent upon it, so that, although he had brought forward works nearly 
 to the time of publication, he would be so far led away into other regions 
 of thought that he found it difficult and irksome to return. Thus it was 
 that his published works are few; although his contributions to the science 
 of mathematics are most important, and his text-books and elementary 
 treatises are widely circulated. . . . To Professor Peirce belongs the dis- 
 tinction of being one of the founders of a new branch of mathematics, the 
 final form of which is not yet determined, but which may prove to be the 
 great event in the mathematical history of this century. The contributions 
 to this branch have been made by Sir W. Rowan Hamilton in his " Quater- 
 nions," H. Grassmann, in his " Ausdtknumgslekref and Professor Peirce 
 in his " Linear Associative Algebra." This work has been published in an 
 edition of some one hundred copies, which was not put in type, but litho- 
 graphed from the manuscript. As an astronomer Professor Peirce's record 
 is high, although he has written no work on the science. 
 
FROM THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE, OCT. 7. 
 
 PROFESSOR PEIRCE was the son of Benjamin Peirce, the librarian of 
 Harvard University from 1826 to 1831, the year of his death. Benjamin 
 Peirce, sen., was the first scholar in the class of iSor, and for some years was 
 a merchant at Salem, Mass. After his appointment as librarian, he wrote a 
 partial history of the University, bringing it down to the time of the Revolu- 
 tion: this work was published in 1833. Benjamin Peirce, jun., was born at 
 Salem, April 4, 1809, and was prepared for college under the instruction of 
 Nathaniel Bowditch and at Andover. lie entered Harvard in 1825, and 
 immediately distinguished himself by his devotion to mathematics. He was 
 graduated in 1829, and at once took a position as a teacher of mathematics 
 in Round Hill School at Northampton, Mass., then under the charge of 
 Joseph G. Cogswell and George Bancroft. 
 
 In 1831 Professor Peirce returned to Cambridge to fill the position of 
 tutor in mathematics in the University. In 1833 he was made University 
 professor of mathematics and natural philosophy, and in 1842 he became 
 Perkins professor of astronomy and mathematics. In 1867 Professor Peirce 
 was made Superintendent of the United-States Coast Survey, and held the 
 position for seven years. Since 1849 he had been consulting astronomer to 
 the American Ef>hemcris and Nautical Almanac, and for many years he 
 directed the theoretical part of the work. In 1855 Professor Peirce was one 
 of the men intrusted with the organization of the Dudley Observatory. For 
 many years before and after he took charge of the Coast Survey, he was 
 consulted frequently in the work of the office. . . . He received the degree 
 of LL.D. from the University of North Carolina in 1847, anc ^ from Harvard 
 University in 1867. He was elected an Associate of the Royal Astronomi- 
 cal Society of London in 1849, and a member of the Royal Society of Lon- 
 don in 1852. He was elected president of the American Association for the 
 Advancement of Science in 1853 (the fifth year of its existence), and was one 
 of the original members of the National Academy of Sciences. He was a 
 member of the Royal Societies of Edinburgh and Gottingen, and Honorary 
 Fellow of the Imperial University of St. Vladimir at Kiev. . . . Professor 
 Peirce was married in July, 1833. His wife, three sons, and a daughter 
 survive him. His eldest son, James M. Peirce, is University/professor of 
 mathematics in Harvard ; Charles S. Peirce is a professor in the Johns 
 Hopkins University ; H. H. D. Peirce is connected with the firm of Herter 
 Brothers, of this city. 
 
FROM THE BOSTON EVENING TRANSCRIPT. 
 
 HIGH on the list of monumental names 
 
 Of sons of science in thy native land, 
 
 Thy honored name conspicuous stands inscribed ; 
 
 Nor shall its capitals grow dim v/ith years. 
 
 'Twas fit thy long farewell to earth should come 
 When autumn shed its withered leaves around. 
 No wintry chills had closed the dying year ; 
 So thou, ere wintry age had chilled thy powers, 
 Art gathered home to fields of higher growth. 
 
 Thy exit here was but thy entrance there, 
 Where spring perennial blooms upon thy path. 
 Beside thy couch a guardian stood unseen, 
 To watch the signal of thy latest breath ; 
 And at its hush he opened wide the door, 
 Let in the sunlight of immortal day 
 To beam forever on thy opening eye. 
 
 But now what sounds of welcome strike thy ear 
 From those that meet thee on celestial shores, 
 Who once on earth the paths of science trod ! 
 There thou now read'st creation's highest truth : 
 All who have lived live noiv in endless life. 
 No dark annihilation's night has checked 
 The march progressive of those minds like thee, 
 Who in time past the lamp of learning bore. 
 
 Couldst thou now speak to mortal ears once more, 
 
 Thy words would tell of sympathetic threads 
 
 Leading through time and space that touched thy soul 
 
 Upon its entrance to a higher life ; 
 
 Of words of greeting that fell on thy ear 
 
 From those once known to thee, or known by fame, 
 
 As thy companions in the search profound 
 
 Of Nature's truths in years or centuries gone. 
 
 An Agassiz is there to welcome thee, 
 
And thy own Bowditch is not far away ; 
 
 For who shall say that, ere this present hour, 
 
 Thou hast not met in converse face to face 
 
 A Newton, Leibnitz, Bacon, a Laplace ; 
 
 And with them seated on some height sublime, 
 
 That overlooks the wide expanse of worlds, 
 
 Hast talked of laws of motion yet unknown 
 
 In mortal depths of mathematic lore ; 
 
 And with thy vision that can far outreach 
 
 The telescopic gaze with which thy eye 
 
 On earth could penetrate the realms of space, 
 
 Canst planetary globes behold unseen by man, 
 
 And trace the blazing comet as it sweeps 
 
 Its mighty circuit of a thousand years? 
 
 These were thy hopes expressed when yet on earth, 
 
 While bright reality stood beckoning on 
 
 With guiding hand, that now holds fast thy own. 
 
 Around thee no materialistic chain 
 
 Thy demonstrative science ever threw 
 
 To hold in doubt a life beyond the grave, 
 
 And dwarf the infinite to narrow sense, 
 
 That claims where nought is seen there nought can be. 
 
 Had thy bold genius lacked the potent spring 
 
 Coiled by immortal hope's inspiring power, 
 
 Unsinewed, thou hadst never climbed so high, 
 
 And left thy mark emblazoned to the world. 
 
 The planets in their orbits long had moved 
 By laws that never were revealed to man, 
 Till minds like thine sought out the hidden key 
 Which laid them open to the common eye. 
 Not all the arts of ancient Greece and Rome, 
 Nor age mediaeval' s theologic mist, 
 Could tell that force centrifugal was bent 
 By force c'entripetal's well-balanced curve, 
 To guide earth's motion in its annual round. 
 Or, if this truth was faintly shadowed forth 
 By minds heretical in cells obscure, 
 It found no credence in the schools long sunk 
 In shades of dark ecclesiastic night. 
 
Hacbt thou then lived when Church infallible 
 Prescribed the bounds to universal truth, 
 And hadst thou said, "Earth on its axis turns," 
 Thou mightst for years in prison walls confined 
 Have paid the forfeit Galileo paid. 
 
 Thy friends in sable robes and bowed with grief, 
 As to thy lifeless form they bade farewell, 
 Beheld through tearful eyes the look serene 
 Stamped by thy parting soul upon that brow 
 Ere he did turn to wing his upward way. 
 
 He who gave life gave what seems death to man, 
 But 'tis a death that gives more life to life. 
 Creative force and force destructive joined 
 Live nut as attributes of Power Divine. 
 God with one hand withdraws the life of earth, 
 But with the other gives the life of heaven. 
 Death is a word in language all unknown, 
 Save in the lexicon compiled by man. 
 
 GEORGE THWING. 
 
 FROM THE SPRINGFIELD REPUBLICAN, OCT. n. 
 
 AT the death of some men and of many women it is proper that the few 
 who knew them best should say to us who survive, what their life-work \vas, 
 and what the character which shaped it or grew out of it. But when men of 
 a public genius and of known fame pass from earth, and their lives are 
 commemorated by other public persons, there may yet be room for the remi- 
 niscences of those who knew them less intimately, but who, from casual 
 association, or the communication of pupil with teacher, may have noted 
 traits that sometimes escape the observation of familiar acquaintance. It is 
 a maxim in one of Professor Peirce's polygon of sciences astronomy 
 that the eye sees better in certain star-fields by a side glance than by direct 
 gaze. Let this be the excuse (as respect and affection are the motive) for 
 adding a few words to the tributes that genius and friendship will pay to this 
 man of friendly and soaring genius. 
 
To most young men Peirce, in his own mathematical demesne, was formid- 
 able or quite inaccessible, the warder of an enchanted tower, whose ban- 
 ner bore a strange device (being interpreted, it said Excelsior] whose speech 
 was foreign, and who paced his battlements with a far-looking manner, 
 
 " His thoughts commercing with the skies." 
 
 But when this wizard stepped down from his post, crossed his moat, and 
 opened his garden gate, nothing could be more attractive than the vistas and 
 plantations he opened to our view. I remember as but yesterday, though it is 
 well-nigh thirty years ago, the blank confusion with which the ill-instructed 
 youth confronted his problems and the Sphinx who gave them out, and the 
 thrill of enthusiasm in the same youth when the range and scope of the 
 mathematical sciences was flashed upon his imagination, in the fascinating 
 lectures, of which he gave us only too few. Few men could suggest more 
 while saying so little, or stimulate so much while communicating next to 
 nothing that was tangible and comprehensible. The young man that would 
 learn the true meaning of apprehension as distinct from comprehension, should 
 have heard the professor lecture, after reciting to him. 
 
 Peirce was a transcendentalist in mathematics, as Agassiz was in zoology; 
 and a certain subtile tie of affinity connected these two men, so unlike in their 
 special genius. Looking up to his familiar stars, Peirce might have said to 
 Agassiz, as Persius to Cornutus, 
 
 Nescio qiiod certe est quod me tibi temperat astrum; 
 " Some star, alone to heaven known, attuned in tone these souls of ours." 
 
 Other professors, genial or learned or wise, or all three in one, like Dr. 
 Walker, adorned in my time the places they held at Cambridge, but Agassiz 
 and Peirce were the men of genius we met there. Alike in this, they were 
 also alike in their enthusiasm, which neither the piercing scepticism of Cam- 
 bridge could wither, nor declining years chill with the frost of age. Indeed, 
 we have fancied that Peirce grew more enthusiastic as he grew older : those 
 long gray locks were not shaken in reproof of youthful eagerness, like so 
 many bald heads we have known, b. ut the magnificent front they encircled 
 smiled a welcome to all that was new and advancing. The thing he dis- 
 trusted was routine and fanatical method, whether new or old ; for thought, 
 salient, vital, co-operative thought, in novel or in ancient aspects, he had 
 nothing but respect and furtherance. Some recent words of his are both 
 characteristic and instructive. He said : 
 
 "Those" who have lived long enough to have observed the growth of 
 
American colleges, and have seen in how short a time the favorite seat of 
 learning can change from place to place . . . have seen flourishing institu- 
 tions reduced to comparative inefficiency by the loss of great scholars and 
 vigorous investigators of science. It is questionable whether Harvard is not 
 already suffering in this direction, whether there is not too profuse an expen- 
 diture upon class-teaching, and whether the outlay to supply the loss of the 
 higher and the more inspiring instruction, which is given by such men as 
 Felton and Agassiz and Wyman and \Vinlock, is not unfortunately restricted. 
 Enthusiasm, which is the highest clement of successful instruction, can best 
 be imparted near the fountain-head, where the springs of knowledge flow 
 purest, and where the waters are undiluted by the weakening influence of 
 text-book literature." 
 
 Those who stood near Professor Peirce in these later years know well 
 that he did not share the cool indifference, still less the irreverent aversion 
 to the Father of souls, which has been a growing evil among men of science. 
 He did verily believe in the human soul, and of course in the divine soul ; 
 and he saw no reason and had no wish to avoid the consequences of that be- 
 lief. It was no doubt with this thought in mind, as well as from his admira- 
 tion for Professor Harris and others concerned in the Concord School of 
 Philosophy, that he welcomed it so cordially and counselled them so wisely 
 respecting it. He alone of the Cambridge professors was consulted in 
 advance concerning it ; and perhaps he was the only one among them who 
 could then have foreseen, as he did, its mission and its probable success, or 
 who would have lent his name and voice to the undertaking. For this, and 
 for many evidences of friendly support in causes that appeal but faintly to 
 populaf recognition, at least in their early stages, some of us cherish with 
 renewed affection the memory of this public-spirited man. 
 
 Of his special work in science, others can better speak, or have already 
 spoken. But it may here be said that he never overvalued his services in this 
 direction : he was willing to be esteemed for less than he had done, and 
 could join most heartily in the praise of others who perhaps owed their im- 
 pulse to him. Modest and magnanimous,, but not unobservant, his ambition 
 for personal distinction was early and easily satisfied ; and he thus rid himself 
 of what is to most men of science a perturbing, and too often an ignoble, ele- 
 ment of discomfort. America has nothing to regret in his career but that it 
 must now be closed ; while her people have much to learn from his long and 
 honorable life. F. B. S. 
 
 CONCORD, Oct. 7, 1880. 
 
FROM THE NATION, NEW YORK, OCT. 14. 
 
 THE name of Benjamin Peirce, who died in Cambridge, Oct. 6, has shed 
 lustre upon mathematics, and physics in America for many years. Born at 
 Salem, Mass., April 4, 1809, he was graduated from Harvard College at the 
 age of twenty, and two years afterwards was appointed tutor. For forty- 
 nine years he was directly connected with the Faculty of the College. 
 He published a series of text-books on pure mathematics, also a quarto vol- 
 ume on analytical mechanics, and a lithographed volume on linear and 
 associative algebra, besides making numerous contributions to scientific 
 periodicals, the proceedings of learned bodies, and the appendices of the 
 United States Coast Survey Reports. The enthusiastic admiration felt tow- 
 ards him by his intimate friends was due to his moral as well as to his 
 intellectual character. Making the concession that there was occasionally a 
 touch of intolerance in his manner towards pretentious mediocrity, they would 
 allow nothing in him to have been aught else than of the highest quality. 
 Persons who could not understand a word of his abstruse speculations were 
 compelled to listen to his earnest argument, and knew that his conclusions 
 must be important and true, even when they did not know what his conclu- 
 sions were. Successive classes complained of him that he did not make 
 himself plain to the ordinary understanding, that he was not a good teacher ; 
 yet they felt a potent influence from him stimulating them to higher efforts of 
 the mind and to a nobler moral stand. 
 
 His published works are remarkable for the novelty or originality, both of 
 their lines of thought and of their methods. He was singularly direct and 
 clear : the only obscurity which is ever found in his writings is that which 
 arises from the omission of the simpler links in the chain of reasoning. But 
 to a well-grounded mathematician this very brevity becomes an efficient source 
 of perspicuity. No fog is more bewildering than verbosity, which never ap- 
 proached Peirce's writings. His mind moved with great rapidity, and it was 
 with difficulty that he brought himself to write out even the briefest record of 
 its excursions. In a mathematical society over which he presided for some 
 years, the contrast between him and the secretary, Professor Winlock, was as 
 noteworthy as the remarkable talent of both. The society comprised half a 
 dozen other men of some reputation in Cambridge and Boston, who met to 
 discuss purely mathematical topics. Each member would bring forth some- 
 thing novel in his own particular branch of inquiry ; and in the discussion 
 which followed it would almost invariably appear that Peirce had, while the 
 
paper was being read, pushed out the author's methods to far wider results 
 than the author had dreamed. The same power of extending rapidly in his 
 own mind novel mathematical researches, which ordinary men could have 
 done only by days of labor with paper and pencil, was exhibited at the ses- 
 sions of every scientific body and every chance meeting of a scientific charac- 
 ter at which he was present. What was quite as admirable was the way in 
 which he did it, giving the credit of the thought always to the author of the 
 essay under discussion. His pupils thus frequently received credit for what 
 was in reality far beyond their attainment. He robbed himself of fame in 
 two ways : by giving the credit of his discoveries to those who had merely 
 suggested the line of thought, and by neglecting to write out and publish 
 what he had himself thought out. 
 
 Professor Peirce's activity of mind was by no means confined to the special 
 topics of physics and mathematics. He was among the first to read any new 
 and noteworthy poem or tale, to hear a new opera or oratorio ; and his judg- 
 ment and criticism upon such matters was keen and original. His interest 
 in religious themes was deep, but it was in the fundamental doctrines rather 
 than in the debates of sectarians : he was a devout believer in Christianity, 
 but held to no established creed. The quickness of his observation of exter- 
 nal things was as decided as was his power of abstraction. The plants and 
 insects by the roadside he observed as a naturalist observes them. To his 
 paper, read in 1849, before the American Association for the Advancement 
 of Science, the botanists and zoologists are indebted for what will, we think, 
 in the future progress of biology prove to be a great intellectual step in phys- 
 ics, lie showed in the vegetable world the demonstrable presence of an 
 intellectual plan ; that what had been called phyllotaxis involved an alge- 
 braic idea : Mr. Chauncey Wright afterward showed that this algebraic idea 
 was the solution of a physical problem. There the matter dropped, but it 
 will not lie neglected forever ; and in future discussions the value of this and 
 of sundry other of Peirce's contributions to organic morphology must be 
 acknowledged. 
 
 The higher mathematical labors of so eminent a geometer must, of course, 
 lie beyond the course of general recognition. Among the things which give 
 him a just claim to this title may be mentioned his discussion of the motions 
 of two pendulums attached to a horizontal cord ; of the motions of a top ; of 
 the fluidity and tides of Saturn's ring; of the forms of fluids enclosed in ex- 
 tensible sacs ; of the motions of a sling ; of the orbits of the comet of 1843, 
 Uranus, and Neptune ; of the criteria for rejecting doubtful observations ; 
 
of a new form of binary arithmetic ; of systems of linear and associative 
 algebra ; of Espy's theory of storms ; of various mechanical games, puzzles, 
 etc. ; of various problems in geodesy ; of the lunar tables, and occultations 
 of the Pleiades, etc., etc. When in 1846 he announced in the American 
 Academy that Galle's discovery of Neptune in the place predicted by Le 
 Verrier was a happy accident, the President, Edward Everett, " hoped the 
 announcement would not be made public : nothing could be more improbable 
 than such a coincidence." "Yes," replied Peirce, " but it would be still more 
 strange if there were an error in my calculations," a' confident assertion 
 which the lapse of time has vindicated. None of his labors, perhaps, lie far- 
 ther above the ordinary reach of thought than his little lithographed volume 
 on Linear and Associative Algebra. In this he discusses the nature of mathe- 
 matical methods, and the characteristics which are necessary to give novelty 
 and unity to a calculus. Then he passes to a description of seventy or eighty 
 different kinds of simple calculus. Almost no comment is given; but the 
 mathematical reader discovers, as he proceeds, that only three species of cal- 
 culus, having each a unity in itself, have been hitherto used to any great ex- 
 tent, namely, ordinary algebra, differentials or fluxions, and quaternions. 
 Whether the clinant algebra of Ellis would stand Peirce's tests, we have not 
 examined. But what a wonderful volume of prophecy that is which describes 
 seventy or eighty species of algebra, any one of which would require genera- 
 tion after generation of ordinary mathematicians to develop ! Besides his 
 labors as professor at Cambridge, Peirce was always of great assistance in 
 the American Ephemeris, and in the Coast Survey, of which he was for a 
 time superintendent. The reports of that Survey and the tables of the 
 Ephemeris have rapidly raised the scientific reputation of America, which, in 
 1843, stooc l m astronomy among the lowest of civilized nations, and is now 
 among the highest, a change which was by no means ungrateful to Peirce's 
 strongly patriotic feeling, and which he could not but know was as much due 
 to himself as to any other person. 
 
 FROM THE WOMAN'S JOURNAL, OCT. 23. 
 
 THE death of this chief among American mathematicians should cause an 
 especial feeling of loss on the part of women, inasmuch as he, like his friend 
 
Agassiz, was a life-long advocate of higher education for both sexes. Many 
 years before the "Annex" was ever dreamed of, he formed a class in geom- 
 etry for girls in Cambridge, of which my own elder sister was a member ; and 
 he more than once received young women as pupils in the higher mathematics. 
 He was one of the first and warmest friends of school suffrage for women, 
 attending some of the first and some of the latest meetings on that subject, 
 down to the time of his last illness ; and on one of these occasions, last April 
 or thereabouts, at a meeting held in Boston, he made an appeal to women for 
 the discharge of their duty under the law, an appeal so solemn and impress- 
 ive as to hold the audience spell-bound. There was always something 
 peculiarly serious in his manner and thrilling in his voice, when he was 
 deeply moved ; and I should not think that any person who heard him at 
 that particular time could ever forget it. 
 
 Professor Peirce was one of the last links between the old and new Har- 
 vard College. He recalled a period when the numerical smallness of the 
 corps of professors was balanced by remarkable individual instances of 
 strength and talent ; so that, while the total weight of influence exerted over 
 pupils may have been less than now, the strength of individual impression was 
 perhaps greater. It is the fashion to speak of Professor Peirce as a man of 
 great mathematical genius, but unfitted for a teacher ; as one whose books 
 were obscure, and whose personal instructions difficult an 1 discouraging. 
 But, speaking as one of his earlier pupils, I can say that his was on the 
 whole the most stimulating intellectual influence I ever encountered ; that no 
 text-books bring back such associations of mental excitement as his Geom- 
 etry and Algebra and Trigonometry ; I never open them without'wishing that 
 I could resume that particular study with him as a teacher ; and this, after 
 all, must be the test of influence. 
 
 Perhaps there was something particularly favorable in the circumstances 
 under which I first knew him. My class in Harvard College was the first in 
 which was tried a short-lived experiment toward what is now called the Elec- 
 tive System. By the plan then attempted, mathematics ceased to be a pre- 
 scribed s-tudy after the sophomore year ; and only those continued it who 
 voluntarily chose that elective. This system, now familiar, was then a nov- 
 elty ; and it was probably a real pleasure for a man of genius like Peirce to 
 have in his hands only a few who were willing to be taught, instead of a large 
 number of unwilling pupils to be dragged along. In the first glow, he proba- 
 bly overrated both the zeal and the capacity of his special students ; but v he 
 certainly threw himself with the greatest zest into the work of instruction. 
 
 5' 
 
He gave us his " Curves and Functions " in the form of lectures ; and some- 
 times, even while stating his propositions, he would be seized with some 
 mathematical inspiration, would forget pupils, notes, every thing, and would 
 rapidly clash off equation after equation, following them out with smaller and 
 smaller chalk-marks into the remote corners of the blackboard, forsaking his 
 delightful task only when there was literally no more space to be covered, 
 and coming back with a sigh to his actual students. There was a great fasci- 
 nation about these interruptions: we were present, as it seemed, at mathe- 
 matics in the making ; it was like peeping into a necromancer's ceil, and 
 seeing him at work ; or as if our teacher were one of the old Arabian 
 algebraists recalled to life. The less we knew of what was" going on, the 
 more attractive was the enthusiasm of the man ; and his fine face and impress- 
 ive presence added to the charm. 
 
 The real fame of Professor Peirce will of course rest on those great 
 mathematical discoveries and suggestions, which, in the opinion of those best 
 qualified to judge, will gradually exert a marked influence on the science of 
 the future. As to this it would be presumption in me to express an opinion ; 
 but, having had the good fortune to be included under very favorable circum- 
 stances among his pupils, I can testify most cordially as to the strong influ- 
 ence he exerted on at least one of that number. T. W. H. 
 
 FROM THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE FOR 
 NOVEMBER. 
 
 PROFESSOR BENJAMIN PEIRCE, LL.D., F.R.S., Perkins professor of 
 astronomy and mathematics at Harvard University, died at his home in 
 Cambridge, Oct. 6, in the seventy-second year of his age, and the fiftieth of 
 his connection with the University. His father and mother were both dis- 
 tinguished for their acuteness of mind ; and his instructor, Nathaniel Bow- 
 ditch, predicted that the boy Peirce would be one of the first mathematicians 
 of his day, a prediction fully realized. In 1831, two years after graduation 
 at Harvard College, he was appointed mathematical tutor, in 1833 professor, 
 and in 1842 he was appointed to the chair he filled and honored until his 
 death. He found it consistent with his devotion to science to do much work 
 in connection with other institutions than Harvard during his professorship. 
 
 3 2 
 
Among these services, in 1849 ne undertook the revision of the American 
 Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac, for which he prepared his valuable lunar 
 tables. In 1855 he was one of the commission to organize the Dudley 
 Observatory. From 1867 to 1874 he was in charge of the United-States 
 Coast-Survey, and rendered great service to the country and to science by 
 recruiting the languishing financial strength of that service, and impressing 
 upon Congress the duty of effectually re-organizing and pushing forward the 
 work so much retarded by the civil war. He was one of the original mem- 
 bers of the National Academy. He threw all his influence into the organiza- 
 tion and successful development of the American Association, which he 
 always held should be free from class distinctions, and to which he would 
 never be elected in the higher class of fellows, but was a member only. He 
 contributed very largely to make the American Academy of Boston what it 
 is; and throughout the whole of the scientific literature of the past fifty years 
 Peirce's name frequently occurs as a contributor upon mathematical and 
 physical topics. In his own department of the University he thoroughly 
 impressed the concise methods of thought so effectually used in his greater 
 works. The teaching at Harvard is based upon his methods and notation, 
 and these methods are models of perspicuity and elegance. In physical 
 astronomy perhaps his greatest works were in connection with the planetary 
 theory, his analysis of the Saturnian system, his researches regarding the 
 lunar theory, and the profound criticism of the discovery of Neptune follow- 
 ing the investigations of Adams and of Leverrier. As a mathematician, his 
 work on Analytical Mechanics, his treatise on Curves, Functions, and Forces, 
 and his memoir on Linear Associative Algebra, all evince extraordinary 
 originality and genius. Many of his detached papers, relating to the theory 
 of observing, and the solution of special problems, show an appreciation of 
 the needs in applied mathematics which perhaps has not been exhibited by 
 the same order of genius since the death of his friend and admirer, Gauss. 
 His originality was fostered by his habit of examining a new mathematical 
 question for himself, and only referring to the work of other geometers after 
 he had first fairly exerted his own powers of analysis. 
 
 His genius was early recognized abroad ; and elections to the Royal Socie- 
 ties of London, Edinburgh, and Gottingen, and to various Continental socie- 
 ties, were awarded him. The versatility and breadth of his mind is partly 
 shown by the scope of his papers ; but to those who came in daily contact with 
 him he showed such a penetrating discernment of the conditions of a problem, 
 he made such sagacious suggestions regarding the inferences to be drawn 
 
 33 
 
from the data before him, he showed such a wonderful power of generaliza- 
 tion, that the papers he has given to the world only seem to indicate the 
 quality of work his mind had constahtly before it, and to afford no idea of 
 the multitudinous problems he had been interested in, and discarded as soon 
 as the solution became evident to himself. He habitually ascribed to his 
 listener a power of assimilation which the listener rarely possessed. He 
 assumed his readers could follow wherever he led ; and this made his lec- 
 tures hard to follow, his books brief, difficult, and comprehensive, and his best 
 work only when his listeners were students trained in his methods who had 
 already attained some skill as mathematicians. He was personally magnetic 
 in his presence. His pupils loved and revered him, and to the young man 
 he always lent a helping hand in science. He inspired in them a love of truth 
 for its own sake. His own faith in Christianity had the simplicity of a 
 child's ; and whatever radiance could emanate from a character which com- 
 bined the greatest intellectual attainment with the highest moral worth, that 
 radiance cast its light upon those who were in his presence. His works are 
 already scarce, and some of them hardly obtainable ; notably the second vol- 
 ume of his " Curves, Functions, and Forces," and his memoir on " Linear 
 Associative Algebra." It is much to be desired that the manuscripts he has 
 left be completed so far as possible, and made accessible ; and this work 
 could devolve on no person so well qualified as is his distinguished son, 
 Professor James Mills Peirce. L. VV. 
 
 FROM NATURE FOR OCT. 28. 
 
 WE regret to have to record the death at Cambridge, Mass., on Oct. 6, of 
 Professor Peirce of Harvard University. . . . For the past thirty-five years 
 he has occupied a professorship at Harvard ; and as a lecturer, author, 
 thinker, and investigator, has ranked not only among the first of a numerous 
 corps of professors, but also among the first of American men of science. 
 Devoting himself originally to mathematics, Professor Peirce has successively 
 pursued exhaustive studies in all the branches more closely allied to mathe- 
 matics, and has attained eminence equally in physics, astronomy, mechanics, 
 and navigation. His numerous investigations in these various departments, 
 while read before various scientific societies, have been published, unfortu- 
 
nately, for the most part in the briefest possible form, and the results of many 
 of his researches are to be found only in the manuals he published. As an 
 author Professor Peirce was highly esteemed upon both sides of the Atlantic ; 
 his work on analytical mechanics, which appeared in 1857, being regarded 
 then, even in Germany, as the best of its kind. ... As a lecturer Professor 
 Peirce was highly esteemed in both scientific and popular circles. It is rela- 
 ted that in 1843, ^Y a sei "i es of popular lectures on astronomy, he so excited 
 the public interest that the necessary funds were supplied for, erecting an 
 observatory at Harvard. A remarkable series of lectures on "Ideality in 
 Science," delivered by him in 1879 before the Lowell Institute in Boston, 
 attracted the general attention of American thinkers, on account of the 
 thoughtful consideration of the vexed question of science and religion. 
 
 Much of Professor Peirce's activity was absorbed by his duties as the head 
 of the American Coast Survey, a position in which he succeeded Professor 
 Bache. He brought to this work the same degree of zeal and ability which 
 were so brilliantly evidenced by his predecessor, and constantly maintained 
 the well-earned reputation of the Coast Survey among the hydrographic 
 efforts of our day. Professor Peirce was one of the founders of the Ameri- 
 can National Academy of Sciences. In 1853 he presided over the American 
 Association for the Advancement of Science. . 
 
 FROiM THE JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE, No. XII. 
 
 ... He was not one of the original members of the American Social 
 Science Association when organized in 1865, but he joined it in 1868 or early 
 in 1869, an d for three years gave great attention to the Department of Edu- 
 cation, of which he was chairman from 1869 to 1872. At the time, in 1872-73, 
 when the practical discontinuance of the Association was favored by many 
 members, by reason of the difficulties attending its work, Professor Peirce 
 was one of those who most earnestly urged its continuance; and it was 
 mainly owing to his remarks and. those of Professor Agassiz, at one or two 
 public meetings in Boston, that the Association remained in activity during 
 the years of panic and political change that followed in the re-election of 
 Gen. Grant in 1872. He supported the course taken by the Association in 
 1874, in favor of " honest money," and in that year, for the first time, read a 
 
paper at our General Meeting in New York. He took an active part in the 
 interesting General Meetings held at Detroit in 1875, at Saratoga in 1876-77, 
 and finally at Cincinnati in 1878, on which occasion he presided, and made 
 the address here printed. He also joined in the debates, particularly of the 
 educational section, and was foremost in all the work of that year. 
 
 Toward the end of 1878 he brought forward in the Council a comprehen- 
 sive plan for connecting our Association with a great university, a plan for 
 which the time was not then ripe, but which is likely, in some form, to be 
 adopted hereafter, and to add materially to the opportunities of university 
 culture in America. This was a subject on which he thought and felt pro- 
 foundly, and which also much occupied the mind of Agassiz in his later 
 years. The discussions of our Department of Education in 1869-70 show 
 how the organization of American universities was viewed by these two men 
 of genius and of wide observation. . . . Professor Peirce's conception of the 
 American Social Science Association was this, that it should be a university 
 for the people, combining those who can contribute any thing original in 
 social science into a temporary academical senate, to meet for some weeks in 
 a given place and debate questions with each other, as well as to give out 
 information for the public. In this line of thought he favored, also, the 
 establishment of 'the Concord School of Philosophy, to do a similar work in 
 the speculative studies ; and he lived to see the partial realization of what he 
 foresaw in this instance. He was ready at all times, while strength lasted, to 
 co-operate in such enterprises for the intellectual and spiritual good of man- 
 kind ; and this Association owes him much for such cordial co-operation and 
 for wise counsel most modestly given. He declined to hold the titular office 
 of President, which was tendered him in 1878, but performed its duties at that 
 time, as he had before performed all the humbler duties assigned him. How 
 nobly he thought of our work, his Cincinnati Address will fully show. May 
 this Association deserve and inherit what he has predicted-for its future ! 
 
 F. B. S. 
 
PEIRCE I who wast ever in our minds 
 
 As one we wholly loved, 
 My soul in this a solace finds, 
 
 Since thine hath been removed, 
 
 That every night, from out the stars 
 
 Two large dark eyes I see, 
 Looking (as 'twere through golden bars) 
 
 All tenderness on me : 
 
 And we believe, as thou didst teach, 
 
 That past the outer lights, 
 Which once by numbers thou couldst reach, 
 
 Thy mind hath gained the heights 
 
 Where love, by knowledge more complete, 
 
 Shall not withhold from us 
 Thine old affection's constant heat, 
 
 Making ours deathless thus. 
 
 T. W. PARSONS. 
 
 Christmas-tide, 1880. 
 
 37 
 
ADDRESS. 1 
 
 BY THE REV. JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE, D.D. 
 
 It is seldom that a man goes away, whose place is not soon and easily 
 filled. He may be a little wiser, a little better, a little stronger than others ; 
 but others come so near him in his special function that they soon replace 
 him. Only occasionally can we use the poet's words, and say, 
 
 " Nee viget quicquam simile aut secnnduin." 
 " No one like him, no one near him." 
 
 But we must say so now. Our friend, who has left us, filled a place no one 
 else can occupy. In that department of intelligence in which alone man 
 seems emancipated from human liability to error, in which, with sure foot, 
 he can advance step by step, along the path of the creative mind, our 
 brother stood among us alone. In this sphere he was able to speak as one 
 having authority ; and who was there who could question or criticise ? What 
 a singular and strange gift was this mighty function of his intellect ! It was 
 born with him. He seemed able, from the very first, to read, with easy facil- 
 ity, the problems of mathematics which others could only solve with labor. 
 As a classmate I remember that our teacher in mathematics, the good and 
 strong man who has just preceded him, George Ripley, never ventured 
 in the recitation room to do more than ask one question of Peirce ; and then 
 allow him to demonstrate in his own way, as he pleased. It is not for me, 
 however, to speak of his accomplishment and attainment on this great line 
 of thought. I leave the task to others, who will tell us how he has explored 
 these regions of mystery alone, and has gone sounding along the dim and 
 perilous ways untrodden before ; how he has furnished new methods of dis- 
 covery for those who shall follow him, and stated some results which thus 
 far no critic has yet seemed able either to accept or to deny. But that which 
 I most feel now, as I stand here with you to say our brief farewell to this 
 noble friend and brother, is, that, on these cold peaks of primeval thought, 
 where he stood alone with the eternal Laws of Nature, he saw no blind 
 
 1 Spoken at the funeral in Appleton Chapel, Saturday afternoon, Oct. 9. 
 
forces, no dead laws, but always spirit and life. His head was never divorced 
 from his heart. While studying physical facts and methods, he was led, not 
 toward materialism, but toward idealism. The more he became familiar with 
 Nature, the more he looked through Nature up to the God of Nature. His 
 intelligence was so large that it did not need to drop the spiritual side of the 
 universe, in its contemplation of the material order of things, but was able 
 to hold both, at the same time, in its ample grasp. One-sided science and 
 one-sided religion may be hostile, but in his soul these two were one. He 
 saw God in Nature, as in history and in life. His religion was rational, and 
 his science was religious. What a happy life has his been ! You, his fellow- 
 workers during long years, in this University, who have seen his manner of 
 living ; you, his companions in science, who have taken sweet counsel with 
 him on those high themes, and walked in company with him to that House of 
 God which men call Nature; we, his friends of many. years, classmates, 
 brothers, none of us to-day, can shed bitter tears for him who 
 
 " Having run 
 
 The round of man's appointed years, at last, 
 Life's blessings all enjoyed, life's labors done, 
 Serenely to his quiet rest has passed." 
 
 We are never nearer immortality than in the presence of such a death as this. 
 We do not feel, we cannot imagine, this to be the end. That marvellous 
 power which holds suns and atoms equally in its grasp ; that creative exu- 
 berance which is yet so conservative that it gathers up every fragment so that 
 nothing be lost, this power cannot allow the personal soul, which he has 
 brought up to such a height of development, to be dissipated anew into empti- 
 ness. The mind which has been led by God so far, cannot stop abruptly here. 
 If no little bird, on its rocking nest among the boughs, is forgotten by God, we 
 may trust ourselves and those we love to that providence which holds us all 
 in the hollow of its hand. It were almost an absurdity in creation, for such 
 carefully developed souls, the ripe fruit of long ages of preparation, to come 
 to an end with the decay of their earthly organization. The Creator has 
 hung an impenetrable veil between this world and the next, shutting us out 
 from precise knowledge of the great beyond, and so confining us to what we 
 can know and do here. If we saw more of the future, perhaps we should 
 tire too soon of the present. But some things we may believe. Since the 
 Father sends death to all his children, just as he sends them life ; as he sends 
 death to the wise and weak, to the saint and the criminal, to the believer and 
 
 40 
 
the atheist, death must be good ; for what God gives to all is a blessing. It 
 must be a good thing to die when death comes. And since the unexhausted 
 powers in man are thought, love, and action ; since there is so much more to 
 know, to love, and to do, than we can accomplish here, we may believe, that, 
 in the future life, our heaven will be, as our heaven is here, in having plenty 
 to know, plenty to love, and plenty to do. How much work here is just 
 begun, and then dropped ! How the tenderest love of this life seems cold 
 and weak to that of which the human heart is capable ! What vast problems 
 of thought open before our eyes, insoluble by our present methods ! The 
 best things we have or do in this world are only prophecies of what is wait- 
 ing for us hereafter. We open our arms so wide, and we embrace so little ! 
 We are like children to whom the mother says, " Be patient, little ones : there 
 is time enough ; you shall have it all by and by." Go up, then, dear friend, 
 and go on ! Outsoaring the shadow of our night, advancing into regions of 
 knowledge to which all former insight is but the auroral presage of coming 
 day, go on, to see what you foresaw ! Go up into larger ranges of vision, 
 into a mightier fulness of comprehension. The soul that always humbled 
 itself here in adoration of the first Fair, sole True, will be exalted into com- 
 munion with the intellectual principalities and powers above. There, too, you 
 will, we trust, meet again the noble brothers of science who have gone before, 
 those who also believed at once in law and love, in things seen and things 
 unseen, in the God of Nature and the God of Reason and the God of Spirit. 
 There you will meet with Agassiz and Jeffries Wyman, Henry and Bache, and 
 renew on a higher plane the studies and affections of earth. Farewell, 
 brother, for a little time. We who remain will endeavor to use these golden 
 hours of time with something of your fidelity : we also will do the work of 
 Him who sent us while it is day. We will go back to life, not sadly, but 
 grateful to Him who has given us such noble friendships, has enabled us to 
 be the witness of such great labors, and who feeds the heart with such 
 immortal hopes. 
 
SERMON. 1 
 
 BY THE REV. A. P. PEABODY, D.D., LL.D. 
 
 " I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish." JOHN x. 28. 
 
 As most of you well know, I am among those who attach to declarations 
 like this from our Saviour infallible authority, and who believe that his prom- 
 ise of eternal life was sealed and confirmed by his own resurrection from the 
 dead. But did I not thus believe, I still should derive from him my strongest 
 argument for immortality. If he bore no specially divine commission for 
 mankind, if he simply took and holds, like any other man, the place due to 
 his ability and character, I still must recognize him, the world tacitly 
 recognizes him, as the greatest of men, the greatest both intellectually and 
 morally, and especially so, in that in him, mind and heart, the intellect and the 
 spirit, were unified as we know not of their having been in any one beside. 
 He knew human nature so well, that while all moral and spiritual teaching 
 not of his school has had but a brief currency, the world has been constantly 
 growing into the appreciation of his teaching in the precise proportion in 
 which it has advanced in intelligence and culture. At the same time, in 
 strength and in beauty, in purity and in love, in those virtues that give might 
 and glory to manhood, in the gentler graces that enrich and adorn quiet 
 scenes and uneventful life, we know not h ; .s peer. No other character pre- 
 sents an aspect equally blameless and lovely in every view, to all conditions 
 of men, and in all time. 
 
 Such a spirit as his cannot but have the clearest spiritual insight. He 
 convinces me by my conversance with him that he knows more about the 
 realm of spiritual being tban any one else who ever trod the earth, that he 
 beheld God, entered into the Divine mind, drank in truth from its living and 
 eternal fountain, as no other human being ever did; and what he says, with 
 entire assurance, with regard to God and man, commends itself to my im- 
 plicit reception. What he professes to know I must believe. What I of 
 myself dimly see and faintly hope looks clear and certain, if it has his attes- 
 
 1 Delivered in Appleton Chapel, Sunday morning, Oct. 10. 
 
tation. In the spiritual realm, I am still a stranger in many of its provinces, 
 though I hope to be more than a sojourner ; but when I enter into commun- 
 ion with him, I feel that I have joined myself to a citizen of that country, 
 who has explored the whole of it, and on whose accounts of it I can place 
 full reliance. Now, he always speaks of immortality as if it were with him 
 a matter, not of doubt or conjecture, not of mere hope, but of certainty. 
 
 Nor does it seem to me of small interest for us, that in general it has been 
 the strong and good who have had this assurance ; while, of those who have 
 denied human immortality as a baseless vision of fanaticism, no mean pro- 
 portion have been men who not unfitly might have felt that they had souls 
 not worth preserving. Not that I would cast reproach on honest scepticism, 
 least of all on that not infrequent type which dares not believe so great a 
 blessedness ; but it certainly has seldom been among spiritually minded men, 
 or among those of pure and high morality, that is, among the kind of men 
 that have been the most at home in the spiritual world, that human immor- 
 tality has reckoned its foremost deniers. 
 
 But not only do I congratulate myself on the testimony of great and good 
 men in harmony with that of Jesus Christ, it is when I think of such men 
 that real death seems utterly opposed to nature, and in itself incredible. Had 
 not Jesus re-appeared, think you that John and Martha and Mary could have 
 believed him wholly dead ? Had the great stone never been rolled away from 
 the sepulchre, would not the saintly women who went thither have felt that 
 the life so divinely pure, so radiantly beautiful, had sunk from their sight, 
 only to rise in some other chamber of that Father's house of which he had 
 been talking so familiarly only three nights before ? 
 
 But without dwelling on him, the All Perfect, have we not a like feeling 
 with reference to all persons of advanced wisdom and worth ? In our own 
 thought we cannot make them dead. They will not stay dead. Press down 
 as you will the earth-clods over what bore their names, you cannot feel that 
 they are buried there, that all that there was of them is mouldering and 
 crumbling away under the ground. 
 
 We talk of a finished life, a life beautifully rounded off, one that has 
 reached its natural period, and is harvested in its late autumn like a shock of 
 corn in its season. There are no such lives ; or, if there be any, they are the 
 kind of lives of which such things are never said. The only finished lives 
 are those that are never fairly begun. The only symmetrically rounded lives 
 are those that have described very small circles. The saint, the sage, the 
 genius, though he live to fourscore, feels that his life has been only a begin- 
 
 43 
 
ning to live, and feels so the more profoundly, the farther he advances in 
 wisdom and goodness. The more resplendently he reflects the Divine image, 
 the more transcendently glorious, beyond his present attainment, seems to 
 him the supreme Archetype of goodness. The deeper his search into the 
 works and providence of God, the more vast is the realm of the unexplored ; 
 for each new province that becomes known to him abuts on every side upon 
 provinces unknown or but dimly seen. Curiosity, longing, yearning, craving 
 for more of love and of goodness, for more of truth and of light, grows by 
 what it feeds on, and is never more intense and active than almost or quite 
 on the brink of the grave, sometimes in the very last moments making 
 the hope of immortality a prophetic vision of a broader, higher scope for the 
 cognitive and active powers ; while if there be a brief suspension as the 
 body lingers and languishes under the death-shadow, it is no longer or more 
 entire than may have intervened in the infirmities or illnesses of earlier 
 days. 
 
 The broken column was, you know, the old heathen symbol of a life cut 
 down on its midway career. If there be a reality in death, the symbol is still 
 more appropriate to the lengthened earthly life that has been consecrated to 
 truth and duty. But, blessed be God, the column is not broken. What 
 seems the line of fracture is but the jagged lower outline of a cloud which 
 the keen vision of faith can pierce, and trace the column as it rises and rises, 
 stage upon stage, into the upper heavens among the pillars on which rests 
 the throne of the Eternal. Oh ! never seems death so utterly unreal as when 
 it hides from mortal sight the greatly good, the excellently great. I am sure 
 that to them, so far as they retain self-consciousness under the death-shadow, 
 it is but a fleeting shadow ; and if for a little while it rests densely on sense 
 and soul, how transcendently glorious the moment when it is lifted from 
 them, and they awake in the everlasting light ! 
 
 Such are the thoughts which must have filled many minds and hearts, as 
 we looked on that serenely beautiful countenance over which yesterday we 
 here offered our prayers and thanksgivings. 
 
 Professor Peirce, passing from us in the fiftieth year of his official connec- 
 tion with our University, had a longer term of service than any member of 
 the academic corps from the foundation of the College, with the one excep- 
 tion of the venerable Tutor Flynt. There was no faint prophecy of his emi- 
 nence in the families from which he sprang. His father had graduated with 
 the first honors of his class, and in his latter years was well known here as 
 of no less rich endowments of mind than surpassing moral worth. His 
 
 44 
 
mother belonged in intellect no less than by birth to a family distinguished 
 for ability and attainments, and was the sister of the eminent divine, Rev. 
 Dr. Nichols, who was second to no man of his time in vigorous thought, 
 lofty ideality, and kindling fervor of utterance, and who possessed, too, a 
 rare capacity and love for mathematical study and investigation. Our Pro- 
 fessor, by common consent unsurpassed in his chosen department, has not 
 transcended the expectation concerning him in his college days, when his 
 fellow-townsman and friend, the venerable Bowditch, foretold of the boy that 
 he would be the first mathematician of his age. His fellow-teachers here 
 had distinct prescience of what he would become, when his tutorship began. 
 While he already took longer steps in the class-room than permitted laggards 
 to keep pace with him, his enthusiasm inspired scholars of the higher order, 
 and made studies that had before been a weary necessity a privilege and a 
 joy. His earliest text-books, unequalled in their kind, marked an era in his 
 department, substituting rigid mathematical processes for easier, but looser 
 methods, which levied on the mind a lighter tax, but gave in return a much 
 scantier revenue. In the second year of his tutorship the absence of Pro- 
 fessor Farrar left him at the head of his department, of which he held the 
 direction till he could resign it, with the prestige of his name so worthily 
 maintained, to his son, of kindred taste and capacity. 
 
 His work and his fame, before and since, have been world-wide. The 
 introductory volume of his " Physical and Celestial Mechanics " few have 
 read, because few could read it ; but by those few it has been regarded as the 
 most profound and thorough and enterprising work of the century, opening 
 vistas of speculation and research which may give direction and scope for 
 the greatest minds of coming generations. If he did not discover the planet 
 Neptune, he did more, in establishing, with the ultimate acquiescence of the 
 scientific world, a possible alternative solution of the disturbances of Uranus. 
 
 At the same time, his practical services in the superintendence of the Coast 
 Survey and in connection with the Nautical Almanac have proved that the 
 highest science has its utilities for the working-day world, and can bear its 
 indispensable part in the arts most essential to human safety and well-being ; 
 nay, that nothing short of this in thoroughness and accuracy can meet the 
 just demands of an advanced civilization. 
 
 Of late years his labors as an instructor have been nominally small, and 
 for very few pupils ; but never has he taught so efficiently, or with results so 
 well worthy of the mind and heart and soul which he has put into his work. 
 His students have been inflamed with his fervor, stirred to high ambition by 
 
 45 
 
his earnest appeals to every noble sentiment, and started by him, not on the 
 cold, plodding study of books, but on the vivid, eager pursuit of the eternal 
 truth of God, of which the signs and quantities of mathematics are the sym- 
 bols. There are in other universities, as in our own, not so much trained as 
 inspired teachers, who owe it to him that they are not hearing schoolboy reci- 
 tations, but transmitting a living science. 
 
 Among the various forms of his activity, emphatic mention should be made 
 of his several courses of lectures open to a larger public here and in Boston. 
 These have been unique ; and I doubt whether there has been any living man 
 who could have approached him in the union of close scientific reasoning, 
 bold and universe-sweeping speculation, poetic fancy, vivid ideality, and 
 profound religious faith and reverence. In these lectures he has shown, as 
 he always felt with adoring awe, that the mathematician enters as none else 
 can into the intimate thought of God, sees things precisely as they are seen 
 by the Infinite Mind, holds the scale and compasses with which the Eternal 
 Wisdom built the earth and meted out the heavens. 
 
 Indeed, this consciousness has pervaded his whole scientific life. It was 
 active in his early youth, as his co-evals well remember; it has gathered 
 strength with his years ; it struck the ever recurring key-note in his latest 
 public utterances. He was a devout, God-fearing man, a Christian, in the 
 whole aim, tenor, and habit of his life. This, from early, I might almost 
 say native, feeling, and equally from faithful inquiry and established convic- 
 tion. He was conversant with the phases of scientific infidelity, and by no 
 means unfamiliar with the historic grounds of scepticism. Nor can I regard 
 it as without profound significance, that a mind second to none in keen intui- 
 tion, in aesthetic sensibility, in imaginative fervor, and in the capacity of close 
 and cogent reasoning, maintained through life an unshaken belief and trust 
 in the power, providence, and love of God, as beheld in his works, and as in- 
 carnate in our Lord and Saviour. 
 
 There is no need that I speak here of his pure, upright, faithful life. In 
 this, as in his scientific genius, the youth was "father of the man." We who 
 were conversant with his boyhood have not the slightest remembrance of 
 aught that was not in beautiful harmony with what he has been in these later 
 years, when to know him has been to love, admire, and revere. 
 
 He has gone from us, not too soon for him to enter on those larger, loftier 
 fields of vision, whose forecast glories shed a light not of earth on his ad- 
 vancing years, but, were it not that God knows best when to call his children 
 home, we should say, far too soon for us ; for, before the brief shadow fell 
 
upon him, he seemed still in the full meridian of his life-day. It has been 
 no rare experience to miss the brightest of a galaxy. But now, our one par- 
 ticular star is quenched. Be it ours to cherish the honored name so redolent 
 of genius and eloquence, of social worth and civic virtue, of Christian faith 
 and piety. And in that nearer circle in which the precious memories of our 
 friend are now so laden with the fresh sorrow of bereavement, may they all 
 be transformed into hopes full of immortality, as they cluster around the 
 home where God in his own good time shall gather the parted family, and 
 where "there shall be no more death" ! 
 
 47 
 
SERMON. 1 
 
 BY THE REV. THOMAS HILL, D.D., LL.D. 
 
 "The Lord giveth wisdom; out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding." 
 PROV. ii. 6. 
 
 THE characteristic of the Hebrew literature is its piety; its recognition of 
 one God, the Creator of the heavens and the earth, from whom alone cometh 
 every good gift, and by whose inspiration alone man has wisdom, strength, 
 and righteousness. 
 
 Another marked feature in these ancient writings is the recognition of the 
 true relation of knowledge, wisdom, and righteousness; that they stand in 
 this order ; that knowledge is the lowest, it is the foundation on which 
 wisdom builds, while righteousness is the highest; that wisdom has not 
 builded worthy of her name until she has built an altar for daily worship and 
 daily renewal of self-consecration to God's service. In the text we have 
 three words indicating this gradation : the Lord giveth wisdom ; out of his 
 mouth cometh knowledge and understanding. The word translated knowl- 
 edge has precisely that force : it is knowledge gained through experience ; 
 that translated understanding signifies knowledge gained by reflection, or 
 insight ; and that translated wisdom refers to the hidden power of using 
 knowledge and insight in the guidance of life. 
 
 These distinctions are deep and subtle: the wisest philosophers puzzle 
 over them in this nineteenth century after Christ, as they did in the ninth 
 century before Christ, and come to no universal agreement. But, subtle as 
 the distinctions are, they are so deep that no man can refuse to perceive 
 their existence. In these ancient Hebrew writings, they are clearly alluded 
 to, and every humble reader of his Bible has a more or less clear perception 
 of the meaning of the allusions. The doctrine of the text is accepted, with 
 more or less understanding of its import, by every devout Christian. 
 
 What is the doctrine ? It is that our Maker has endowed us with three 
 principal intellectual powers : First, the power of external perception, the 
 
 1 Preached in the First Parish Church, Portland, Me., Sunday morning, Oct. 10. 
 
power, that is, of seeing, hearing, feeling, the things about us. By this we 
 gain a knowledge of the sun and stars, the earth and its myriad plants and 
 animals, the boundless space in which it moves, and the endless time in 
 which it pursues its revolutions. Secondly, the power of insight ; by which 
 we know what is going on in the depths of our own souls, our modes of 
 knowledge, our states of feeling, the struggles of desire and of will, the exist- 
 ence of a moral law, the evidences of God's being, the reality of our rela- 
 tions to Him. Thirdly, the power of guiding and directing our own thought 
 and action into a voluntary conformity to the moral law, into a voluntary 
 service of God by his children. 
 
 These are the three great intellectual gifts of knowledge, understanding, 
 and wisdom, which in the text are said to proceed from the Lord. Each one 
 of the three is capable of a very great, an almost endless, diversity of degrees 
 and of variations, so that different minds are fitted for different offices and 
 functions. This has been observed by both heathen and Christian writers in 
 all ages of the world, and is especially dwelt upon by the' Apostle Paul. 
 Every honest and earnest man finds some occupation which is agreeable to 
 him, for which he is fitted, and in which he is useful to his fellow-men. It 
 may be that there is, in some cases, great difficulty in actually getting this 
 occupation ; but the rule is generally true that a man recognizes it when 
 found. 
 
 And in the midst of these diversities of operations of the Spirit of God, 
 there are some who receive ten talents, some who. receive but one. The un- 
 disciplined and foolish man may sometimes repine and murmur because he 
 has not received greater gifts : he is envious of another man's genius, and 
 soured by his own failures when he attempts that which is too high for him. 
 The disciplined and wise man will, however, rejoice always in his own lot, 
 knowing that the good Lord who assigned us these various parts has it in 
 his power, and in his heart, to cause all things to work out a compensation 
 and a recompense for every seeming evil. If a man has less ability to in- 
 crease knowledge, he has usually less capacity also for suffering : great gifts 
 of power increase responsibility, care, and labor. Fidelity to one's own op- 
 portunities, faithfulness in one's own duties, trust in the Divine Providence 
 which orders one's own lot, meek acceptance of the offers of salvation made 
 by Jesus to each child of man, these things bring into the humblest heart 
 the peace of God which passeth understanding. . 
 
 And the man of smaller gifts will, if he be wise, rejoice and be thankful 
 for the gifts bestowed more abundantly upon the chosen few. Pass by, if you 
 
 49 
 
will, the consideration of Him upon whom the Spirit was poured without 
 measure, and to whom we are under obligations far exceeding all our powers 
 of expression : what Christian soul is there who is not thankful that the 
 saint of eagle wing heard in Patmos those promises of unspeakable tender- 
 ness recorded by him for us, soared unto heaven, and heard the Word which 
 was in the beginning, and which assures to us salvation ? Who does not 
 give thanks for the inspiration which made Saul of Tarsus the great apostle 
 to the Gentiles, proclaiming to all ages and to all classes of men the un- 
 searchable riches of Christ ? And time would fail me to add to Barnabas's 
 list of ancient worthies the longer list of those who through nearly nineteen 
 centuries of Christendom have through faith wrought righteousness, and 
 kindled saving and sanctifying faith in generation after generation of ordinary 
 believers. 
 
 The spirit of the Old Testament and of the New requires also in our grati- 
 tude to the Lord, the inspirer of all wisdom, knowledge, and understanding, 
 to remember that he gave all those inspirations by which the arts and sciences, 
 the manufactures and commerce of the world, have grown unto their present 
 condition. The space-penetrating power of a great telescope is not so valu- 
 able as the prophetic vision w^hich sees the deep things of God : yet it is 
 of incalculable value ; and we may thank God, that, through his inspiration of 
 those who form and combine its lenses, we all become more intelligent and 
 willing worshippers of his immeasurable majesty and power. The creative 
 genius of the great poets and writers of fiction Milton and Bunyan, Shak- 
 speare and Tennyson is not so valuable as the terrible power with which Paul 
 lays bare the hideous recesses of a sinful heart, or as the sublime force with 
 which John lifts us up into the bosom in which he lay ; and yet thousands of 
 Christian souls thank God also for the "Paradise Regained," and for "The 
 Holy War," for the wonderful historic dramas and tragedies, for the subtly 
 woven threnodies, which have been the vehicles of morality and religion and 
 strength and wisdom to millions of readers. What Christian heart can refuse 
 its tribute of gratitude also to Him who inspired the sweet singers of our 
 Christian Israel, with psalms that vie with those of David, and with strains 
 of music that waft the hearer into the presence of the heavenly choirs ? 
 Who can measure the effect on the world, in softening the rude and savage 
 manners of former ages, of those wondrous religious pictures, especially of 
 the holy mother and her matchless child, which even to-day draw pilgrims 
 from this side of the Atlantic to behold them ? 
 
 But we are sometimes told, and are sometimes for a moment half afraid it 
 
may be true, that the day of religious art. and religious music, and religious 
 literature is over. The star which arose in the East, it is said, has passed to 
 its setting in the West ; and now there arises, out of the West, a star brighter 
 than the star of Bethlehem, the star of science, which is to disenchant us 
 of all our old reverence and faith. It is to reveal to us the unreality of every 
 thing on which faith has built, and make clear to us that this world of sense 
 is the only real world, and that death is the end of all our life ; that even 
 our human race is to be swept away into utter nothingness, eternal silence 
 and eternal frost. 
 
 It requires but an instant's attention to recognize this as the same strain 
 which has been repeated to us from the left for as many centuries as litera- 
 ture records. It can win attention and belief only by first diverting our at- 
 tention from understanding and wisdom, and fastening it exclusively on 
 knowledge. It is not the voice of science, but only the voice of unwise 
 scientific men. The great increase of knowledge, the marvellous progress of 
 the physical sciences during the last three-quarters of a century, has fulfilled 
 the saying of the preacher, " He that increaseth knowledge increaseth 
 sorrow." Many men who have attained a large knowledge of the movements 
 of matter in the building of plants and animals, fancy themselves thereby 
 qualified to speak with authority concerning questions of metaphysics and 
 theology ; and they utter themselves in these doleful denials of the realities 
 of our Christian faith. At the same time, by their activity in matters of 
 scientific publication, they give to the public the impression that they are 
 leaders in science ; and thus their gloomy denials of religious wisdom have 
 the more disheartening effect on the public mind. 
 
 The evil will be temporary. The Lord giveth wisdom, and out of his 
 mouth cometh knowledge and understanding. The real leaders in science, 
 the master spirits, to whom all three gifts of intellectual power are vouch- 
 safed in due proportion, and each in large measure, are to-day, as they have 
 been in all past ages, men of faith, of devout and religious spirit, recognizing 
 God as the Creator, finding in all their study of His works that there is not 
 an atom in the universe which does not bear indelible evidences of the 
 wisdom and goodness of the Almighty Power which formed it. 
 
 We laid yesterday in the grave the body of one who has long been recog- 
 nized, both in Europe and America, as a man of extensive learning and of the 
 highest genius. Some of his triumphs in the realm of mathematics and as- 
 tronomy have been as sublime as those of any man among the living or the 
 dead. His vigorous powers have until within a year past shown no signs 
 
of enfeebling age. Yet Peirce was, like his teacher Bowditch, like his friends 
 Agassiz and Henry, and others who have recently preceded him into the 
 world of greater light, a man of the most devout Christian faith. We may say 
 of him, " he walked with God, and he was not, for God took him." He is 
 not dead, and cannot die. The immortality of fame which his works secure 
 him is but a faint penumbra of that brilliant glory into which his conscious 
 spirit has ascended. God was to him the only reality ; this world was always 
 to him God's schoolhouse, furnished with the choicest text-books and appar- 
 atus ; and he. was ever desirous of receiving the Master's approval. The 
 universe, he was accustomed to say, "is a wonderful* philosophical combina- 
 tion of ideas, a problem for science to solve. What is science but the partial 
 revelation of the harmony of those ideas, of the harmony and self-consistence 
 of God's thought ? " At other times his understanding (in the sense of my 
 text) would speak, and he would say that the universe is a poem, history a 
 drama, for the instruction and uplifting of every reader. 
 
 Those of my hearers who enjoyed a personal acquaintance with Peirce's 
 maternal uncle, the former revered and beloved pastor of this parish, Dr. 
 Ichabod Nichols, may understand something of that swelling gratitude too 
 deep for words which struggles within me as I remember how much I have 
 owed during the past forty-one years to the influence of this nephew, partak- 
 ing as he did in so many of his uncle's noblest qualities. 
 
 Alas ! that he shared also in some of Dr. Nichols's limitations ; notably in 
 this, that neither of them left in legible form enough to show to the next 
 generation the full reasons why, in their own day, they inspired their contem- 
 poraries with such unlimited confidence and love. 
 
 In Peirce's case, however, enough has been published during his lifetime 
 to secure him a permanent place in the "literature of mathematics, astronomy, 
 and geodesy ; although not enough to show the exalted character of his 
 imagination, the wonderful power of his eloquence, the burning force of his 
 moral rebukes, the great versatility of his genius, the quickness of his obser- 
 vation, the electric rapidity of his mental operations. The walk of a mathe- 
 matician of so high an order is peculiarly lonely: he roams among Alpine 
 heights which "vulgar feet have never trod," the paths that are "sacred to 
 thought and God." 
 
 It would be impossible to translate into ordinary forms of language, even 
 the results, much more the processes, by which he attains certainty on ques- 
 tions which lie far beyond the reach of all usual methods of reasoning. 
 Peirce has rendered to the pure mathematics, to geometry, to astronomy, to 
 
 5- 
 
botany and zoology, to geography and geology, even to logic, metaphysics, 
 and theology, valuable services, some of which must be held in everlasting 
 remembrance. No man would select from among the successors of Descartes, 
 Leibnitz, and Newton, twenty names of those who had shown the greatest 
 genius in pure mathematics, down to the year 1875, without including Pcirce. 
 Even the reader who knows nothing of pure mathematics must admire the 
 wonderful genius and the sublime self-knowledge of the man, who, when all 
 the scientific world was rapt in admiration of Leverrier, the creator of in- 
 visible astronomy, who had said to Galle, " Point your telescope to such a 
 spot, and you shall see a planet never yet beheld by mortal eye, but revealed 
 to me by the eye of faith guided by mathesis," calmly said, "Leverrier de- 
 serves all praise as a mathematician, but Galle's discovery is only a happy 
 accident : Leverrier's planet does not exist, and the planet seen by Galle is 
 an entirely different body." Edward Everett, then president of the Academy, 
 asked Peirce to withhold his remark from publication, saying that no words 
 could express the improbability of his statement. "But," replied Peirce, 
 "it is still more improbable that there can be an error in my calculations." 
 Time has long since demonstrated that our American geometer was right. 
 
 A few weeks after this great mathematical triumph I met, in State Street, 
 Boston, the historian Jared Sparks, and he remarked to me that he con- 
 sidered Leverrier's calculation, and Galle's discovery, among the most im- 
 portant events in all recorded history. The effect, said he, upon the general 
 human mind, will be enormous, in the confidence which it will produce, the 
 impulse which it will give to every department of science. Wonderfully has 
 this prediction of President Sparks been fulfilled ! 
 
 A yet more remarkable prediction by Peirce still remains unfulfilled, and 
 ages may pass before even its partial accomplishment. About ten years ago 
 some papers of his were published by the generosity of a few of his friends 
 and pupils. They contained an investigation of sixty or seventy kinds of 
 mathematical language, that is. of sixty or seventy kinds of algebra, a dozen 
 or more of which were very simple. All these kinds were discovered by 
 him in his er.f eavor to answer the question, What conditions must be ful- 
 filled by any algebra? In solving this question he confined himself under 
 some restrictions, so as to narrow the field, and even then found the multi- 
 tude of algebras, that is, of mathematical languages, which I have mentioned. 
 Of these, only three had ever been used by mathematicians ; those three had 
 given employment to men of genius for centuries ; those three had led to all 
 the marvellous triumphs of the science of this nineteenth century ; the others 
 
 53 
 
must be considered as prophecies of the methods which may, in coming 
 centuries, be used in the investigation of physical truth. 
 
 Nature, says Emerson, never becomes a toy to a wise spirit. In the works 
 of God are hidden unfathomable depths of wisdom and knowledge. And it 
 was Peirce's faith, that whatever mathematical truth men reach by a priori 
 reasoning, by researches such as these wonderful ones of his, will, at some 
 future day, in this life, or in that higher life into which he has entered, be 
 found to have been foreknown and used by that Divine Architect who in- 
 spires the mathematician as he does the poet and the prophet. Peirce 
 believed, with all his heart, that in consecrating himself to science he was 
 consecrating himself to God. God's service was his highest aim. When in 
 my younger days he judged too favorably of his pupil's mathematical and 
 scientific ability, he wanted me to enter the field of astronomy. But " the 
 yoke of conscience masterful" drove me into the pulpit; and it was a great 
 happiness to me afterward to have him indorse my decision, and earnestly 
 wish me success in my calling. None of you can be more keenly and pain- 
 fully aware than I am myself of my defects and failures, both as a pastor and 
 preacher ; but none of you can know, as I know, how much of whatever 
 benefit or satisfaction you may have received from my ministrations has been 
 due, under the Divine Providence, to the cordial way in which Peirce rejoiced 
 over my entrance upon the field of his revered and beloved uncle's labors. 
 His sympathy and approval, his agreement with me in religious opinions, has 
 been strength and inspiration to me from the clay of my ordination, nearly 
 thirty-five years ago, to the present hour. Pardon me, therefore, that I thus 
 speak out of a full heart concerning a friend whom the Lord had gifted so 
 richly with knowledge, with understanding, and with religious wisdom. 
 He was not simply a mathematician : he was a man interested in almost 
 every thing of human interest; reading the literature of the past and of 
 the present with appreciative but discriminating eye. If perchance his 
 judgment differed from that of the public, it was nevertheless sustained 
 by good reasons. For example, among the classic work's of the English 
 writers Milton and Eunyan, he always preferred the " Paradise Regained" 
 to the "Paradise Lost," "The Holy War" to the "Pilgrim's Progress," 
 as having much more satisfactory unity in themselves, and thus being 
 more truly works of art ; and also, as being much more thoroughly imbued 
 with the genuine spirit and temper of the Master of the Christian Church. 
 This was what chiefly interested him and warmed his heart. He had no in- 
 terest in the technical discussions of theology; the minutiae of Scriptural 
 
 54 
 
criticism were dry to him. But his heart was moved by the grandeur of the 
 first chapter of Genesis, his conscience responded to the second and third 
 chapters, his moral judgment pronounced a reverent amen to the Ten Com. 
 mandments, and his whole spiritual nature rejoiced in the Sermon on the 
 Mount. He thought that the Lord's Prayer carried in itself the evidence of 
 its divine origin ; he bowed with reverent and rejoicing faith at the foot of 
 the Cross ; and declared that in the very construction of the human heart, the 
 dread sacrifice on Calvary was prefigured and required. Science had not, 
 in his view, completed her task until she had led man to God; knowledge 
 must be followed by insight, and insight by that religious wisdom which will 
 infallibly show the divine beauty of Jesus and the necessity of his messages 
 of reconciling mercy ; sin was the one great sorrow of the universe, and 
 Christ the only adequate Consoler. 
 
 May our meditations upon the example of this disciple lead each of us, 
 also, to the Master in whose promises he humbly trusted and found rest ! 
 
 55 
 
SERMON. 1 
 
 BY THE REV. C. A. BARTOL, D.D. 
 
 " He telleth the number of the stars; he calleth them all by their names." Ps. cxlvii..4. 
 
 WHILE we resume in various ways, how Nature, one after another, resumes 
 us ! Several funerals have lately called my attention : first, that of the 
 Norse minstrel, at seventy still a child, a rare nature in the volume of being, 
 as grammarians say of certain expressions in the Bible that they are spoken 
 but once ; next, of a four-months' babe, ripening and falling from the tree of 
 life like those blossoms that bring forth fruit on the boughs, and bearing the 
 honored name of that great lawyer and Christian patriot Charles Greeley 
 Loring, dying in the same room, on the same day and almost the same hour 
 of the calendar, thirteen years after his grandfather, as though he had by 
 him been called ; lastly, that of the astronomer and mathematician whose 
 demise will produce a sensation in scientific circles throughout the world, as 
 all the pines in the wood resound when some monarch of the forest falls. 
 Death is called in the book of Job " disorderly," because its order is too 
 deep for us to trace. But Nature is impartial, and lays no stress on the 
 decease of king, president, or pope. She loves the babe as much as she 
 does them. Goethe represents her as saying of Shakspeare, " He is a tid-bit ; 
 I will take him last," his literary fame being co-eval with the scriptures of 
 Judasa or Greece ; but by the wavering leaf of infancy, or crashing oak that 
 may figure transcendent genius or virtue, Nature is alike unmoved. The 
 storm that rattled the windows of the houses at Cromwell's departure, 
 and the veil rent and darkened land when Jesus expired, were only seized 
 upon by friends as signifying the importance of these men," great in different 
 spheres. We emphasize, but Nature writes nothing in italics : she holds on 
 her even way. The termination of the humblest career tears some heart- 
 string ; and, when some highly honored personage disappears, we try with 
 our words to blow the trumpet of his fame ; but as we leave the loud plat- 
 form or solemn desk, and come out into the air, the open sky with its vast 
 
 1 Preached in the West Church, Boston, Sunday morning, Oct. 17. 
 
inverted cup has no word, only a smile, for all our gesture and speech.' Yet 
 when I see the beauty of this border and fringe of the universe, the leaves 
 at this season turning to crimson, coral, and yellow gold ere they drop, let no 
 sceptic tell me it is superstition to believe that a Higher than we causes and 
 delights in these charms, and angels innumerable and unseen give us in our 
 transport a share of their ecstasy. 
 
 You will understand it is the religious character of Benjamin Peirce, the 
 great professor, of whom I am to speak, that prompts such reflections for 
 the fit preface and tenor of any true history of his course. His merits in that 
 field of calculation so few are able to enter, among the stars, being unable to 
 measure, I must leave to a jury of his peers, among whom he stood in the 
 first rank, at Paris and Berlin as well as Washington and as well as Boston. 
 What in him fixes my thought, and concerns us all, is his moral example, 
 and his contribution in his convictions to Christian faith. 
 
 " An uridevout astronomer is mad." 
 
 But how few ministers and communicants in regular standing were as devout 
 as he ! He belonged to the same class of minds with Newton, Kepler, 
 Swedenborg, Plato, and all philosophers of supreme influence and repute, 
 in whom keen perception and worshipful feeling are combined. The students 
 of phenomena, of the symptoms in the creation or any of its parts, may be 
 atheistic, as physicians and physical observers have sometimes been ; but 
 Professor Peirce was one of those who take the spiritual into their view. He 
 was a second-sighted, double-sighted, or binocular man. His observation 
 never stuck in the material facts, or stopped short of the principle. If he 
 did not conceive of laws as given or made at any period of time, he beheld 
 them inhering in an Infinite One, eternal and alive, whom he could love and 
 adore. Therefore I single out and point to this dear and revered soul, 
 in the service of our Cambridge University and of our intellectual society 
 for so many years, as one that was never swamped in the "worse than 
 Serbonian bog " of the materialism that has in the last generation so 
 invaded some of the European and other schools, but rose ever into the 
 heaven of personal verities, of which the ethereal orbits he loved to contem- 
 plate were to him but types. He was a scientist, if any one deserves that 
 name, but a philosopher too, and rather of the ideal than utilitarian stamp ; 
 for although not blind to the benefits of science, more than was Francis 
 Bacon, or is the last machinist or engineer, understanding perfectly how 
 ships are guided by hints from the starry sweep through the firmament, 
 
which he himself surveyed at midnight more than at noonday, and how they 
 are guarded from destruction by the Coast Survey, on which with the la- 
 mented Bache he was engaged, to save many a vessel from wreck by show- 
 ing every rock and quicksand more precisely on the chart, he yet had and 
 would share with others the more intense and immortal joy of purely con- 
 templating the truth which is, in its own glory, divinely good. In phyllotaxy, 
 or that special arrangement of the stems on a plant which the planets in the 
 solar system repeat, in immense and splendid illustration of the same law, he 
 had a pleasure which air the harvests of the field could not afford. Having 
 heard a fine oration on the importance of business and business men in the 
 economy of life, he insisted on making the balance true by putting the ideal 
 element of pure thought in the other scale. Who that heard but must have 
 admired his address at the Chestnut-street Club, in which he likened the 
 spinning of the stars to that of an earthly parent's twirling a top for the 
 amusement of his little boy, thus taking up a wooden toy into the solar spaces 
 and Milky Way where the Father of all fatherhood launches the mighty orbs 
 from their centre to please his offspring, as the balls immeasurable and im- 
 ponderable by man whirl around on the ethereal floor ? If, he said, in a 
 nebula or fire-mist was the origin of the sun and all his attendant primaries 
 and satellites, the nebula itself was no vague, void, and thoughtless sub- 
 stance, but had a plan, and involved all in it that was to be evolved out of it, 
 as much as an acorn or an egg. That great thinker, Chauncey Wright, 
 considered the past and future of the outward universe so uncertain and 
 indeterminable, that is, he was so anti-dogmatic, with all his wisdom and 
 profound insight, that he called the whole cosmic weather, like the changing, 
 unpredictable clouds and winds. Peirce saw the stability, mid all the shift- 
 ing, in the immutable mind of God, of which, as the Rock of Ages, he was 
 glad humbly to speak. If to his exposition of the laws of light and motion 
 objection was made, he had no ambition to reply, but had an unperturbed 
 dignity in resting on and trusting in the truth. Said the sublime discoverer 
 Kepler, " I think God's thoughts after him." Peirce, with the prophet 
 Isaiah, was conscious of the rapture of feeling God had thought his human 
 thoughts before him, and that, in some sense, the Everlasting One had 
 weighed and meted out the globes and their huge ellipses, even as does the 
 mortal investigator, however feebly tfie latter follows the wisdom and love 
 that presided at the genesis and birth of all. 
 
 It is this reverent quality in Benjamin Peirce which is the motive of my 
 discourse, and without which none of his surpassing attainments in his explo- 
 
ration, by numbers, of the constitution of things would induce me to celebrate 
 him in this place ; and I am incited by this character of his mind because, in 
 my judgment, by the temporary setting-in of materialism in speculators of 
 the contentious and imperious sort, we are likely, if but for a while, to be put 
 back in all those immaterial values that distinguish and ennoble our nature. 
 The oration, last summer, of Dr. Storrs at Cambridge showed us the " more 
 excellent way." Nevertheless, the main ten:'ency, the current theory (for it 
 is theory, and not Socratically reasoned truth) runs otherwise, and would 
 inform or convince us that all comes up from the earth, and that there is no 
 heaven but this external sky whence aught can come clown. Even the spirits 
 materialize in the dusky circles now ! Like the silt and deposit, by which 
 lakes and creeks are filled up yonder, and the ocean slowly retires from the 
 coast, so a grosser element is the mental sand or mud by which the river of 
 God is made shallow, and the old sea of faith and truth pushed back, to send 
 no more tidings to dwellers in these earthly bounds. The idol of experience 
 is put for the deity of spirit and life. "In matter," says Mr. Tyndall, "we 
 see the promise and potency of all the forms of life." But whence, save 
 from an original, essential, and boundless life or being, arose the possibility 
 of any and all the living forms ? Which, matter or spirit, is first, highest, 
 best? or are they simultaneous and but diverse names of the same thing? 
 In this discussion, the lists drawn and the battle set, Peirce did not hesitate, 
 but took unequivocally and fervently the spiritual side. After listening to 
 him for an hour, who but was persuaded of the superiority of mind, of reason, 
 of love, to all else, and that nought, as he instructed us, could get beyond the 
 beauty and power of a child's prayer taught by a mother at her little one's 
 cot or crib ? I own, for one, I was refreshed and cheered out of all despond- 
 ency or distrust by this pattern of a man whose idea and whose self was an 
 overweight for all the tremendous spheres that had been the theme of his 
 lucid and familiar talk, and which he could imaginatively hand round as little 
 specimens to be examined by his class. 
 
 As he knew the being of God, so he held to the immortality of the soul, 
 and naturally ; for what is composed of, will be resolved into, dust. But the 
 offspring of spirit will outlive this form of flesh. It is the survival of the 
 fittest, beyond any present animal or vegetable cases Darwin cites. 
 
 This faith in him was less a scientific deduction than an instinct, intuition, 
 tradition, and consciousness of religious feeling, although his science contra- 
 dicted not, but was consonant therewith. He shared it with Agassiz, as Dr. 
 Edward H. Clarke told me, Agassiz, his friend and intellectual equal, with 
 
 59 
 
whom he walked between Boston and Cambridge, and talked by the way. 
 He doubted not he should, out of this body, continue the studies which his 
 friend with the microscope and himself with the telescope had begun ; and 
 Agassiz was of the same mind. He thought some point in the constellation 
 Hercules would furnish a good and favorable post whence his observations 
 might be carried on ! As one wants to look around any object of interest, to 
 behold a mountain on the other side, or see the interior of some temple of 
 Vesta, or Arch of Titus with the "golden candlestick " from Jerusalem which 
 was the spoil of war, so he coveted (and has he not reached ? ) another station 
 from which to survey the stars. Is this not so much a conclusion of logic, 
 as a sentiment of hope ? It is not, therefore, less stable and trustworthy for 
 the human soul, in which all noble sentiments are co-ordinate powers with 
 the pure intellect, and, at least, of not inferior worth. 
 
 But I think the pious confidence was born in him, and came from his 
 stock, and the strain of his blood. He was a kinsman, a nephew, of Ichabod 
 Nichols, whom he strongly resembled, my own minister, a true divine and 
 man of genius, one like Coleridge inspired in monologue, and of whom Jona- 
 than Phillips told me that Channing, after listening to his brother on a certain 
 occasion, declared that Nichols was superior in strength to himself, and he 
 could have written no such discourse. It is to Nichols, more than any one 
 out of the house of my own kith and kin, that I am in debt for the first awak- 
 ening of my mind to a sense of its destiny in the grandeur of Christian 
 truth ; and, if I have ever kindled another mind with the same sacred fire, 
 the flame was transmitted as from torch to torch and headland to headland 
 in ancient Greece. My preacher and pastor was an enthusiast, while a ra- 
 tionalist; and I lighted my candle from his ever-burning wick. It is the 
 master in him which the scholar feels is his best gift, whether he paint, sing, 
 play, or discourse ; for the true master ends in giving the scholar to himself. 
 The chief part of my poor faculty was from my partaking my teacher's tone 
 and method, and my pleasure in this particular service of to-day is enhanced 
 by the association of the names of Peirce and Nichols in my own memory 
 and thought. 
 
 What a winsome and gracious, as well as powerful presence, like his 
 uncle's, was that of Benjamin Peirce ! The long soft locks turning to iron- 
 gray, the sweet and sober face, the gentle voice with no harsh guttural note, 
 the impressive brow in which the causal and the ideal forces and organs b.oth 
 strove and both prevailed, the manner alike of loftiness and lowliness, as of 
 one who knew whereof he affirmed, yet deferred to whatever Wisdom had to 
 
 60 
 
offer from any other mouth, are not these among the traits of the picture 
 which death has photographed in the recollection of all his friends ? What 
 has become of the head, so subtle in its processes and manifold, so imagina- 
 tive and so abstruse, at home with arithmetical and rhetorical figures alike, 
 that could contract its scrutiny to the most minute and vanishing point, and yet 
 had room for the broad revolutions of the skies ? What has become of that ? 
 Is it dust ? If so, then it is dust that praises God ! Despite David's doubt- 
 ing inquiry, sepulchres are monuments, not only to mortals, but to the Most 
 High. But the dweller has gone from this slight, curious, convoluted, and 
 bone-protected rotunda of a house, whither, who knows ? or why should we 
 wish with detail of circumstance now to comprehend ? Was the abode made 
 for the inmate, or the inmate for the abode ? Can the occupant not move 
 into another mansion, when, in this clay hut, it has notice to quit ? I refer 
 the question to the Builder, above as below, if you think by his inspiration he 
 has not replied. 
 
 Had the " Mecanique Celeste " an author, and the celestial mechanism 
 none which gave its title to the book ? or shall the human author perish while 
 the book remains ? It were as natural to think, that, while the geometry of 
 the heavens abides, the great Geometer is dead. If the particles made me, 
 when they separate I may not be. But, if I draw or my author wove them 
 for my earthly dress, finer particles may serve me in another form and state ; 
 and I should as soon think the atoms had made God as that they could fash- 
 ion a human soul. 
 
 This, then, is the lesson of the life and character of the astronomer and 
 geometrician, Benjamin Peirce : even a faith we cannot demonstrate or argue 
 into existence, as like some American or African river it takes its rise in 
 distant lakes or mountains unseen from these lower plains, yet which cannot 
 be argued down ! I therefore exhort you to revere, as he did, the moral 
 nature, your own religious constitution and spiritual frame. He believed in 
 the simple unity of God, and enduring substance of the soul. But he is too 
 great to be claimed by any denomination or sect, and is one of those models 
 of humanity by which all the heats of parties are rebuked, a member of that 
 church which is society, and has no articles or forms, any more than do the 
 angels, those pure flames of love. Let us add his monument, his memory, to 
 that of Bowditch, and of all who have been as famous for virtue as for 
 knowledge ; and, in humble spheres, let us emulate the faithfulness which 
 makes all deeds of equal worth, as the smallest vessels sail on the great 
 parallels of the sea. 
 
 6 1 
 
I prize my witness ; for Benjamin Peirce was a healthy mind, with no itch 
 of vanity or tumor of pride, although he had that elevation of humility which 
 cannot be distinguished either from self-respect or a respect for other men. 
 His bearing was that of a noble among nobles, who do not credit any thing 
 base. We sometimes see a personal beauty, which we think God must mean 
 to. last forever, however hereafter it may be suited with a different and more 
 fitting dress. How much higher claim has beauty of disposition and thought ; 
 and into what loftier degrees than any sacred story ever recorded it may yet 
 rise ! As the thrifty rice-bird of the South, bent on eating, is the singing 
 bobolink of the Northern spring, flying and chanting at once, let us hope for 
 our nature a transformation, of which the feathered chorister is but a type. 
 
BENJAMIN PEIRCE:' 
 
 ASTRONOMER, MATHEMATICIAN. 
 
 1809-1880. 
 
 FOR him the Architect of all 
 Unroofed our planet's starlit hall ; 
 Through voids unknown to worlds unseen 
 His clearer vision rose serene. 
 
 With us on earth he walked by day, 
 His midnight path how far away ! 
 We knew him not so well who knew 
 The patient eyes his soul looked through ; 
 
 For who his untrod realm could share 
 Of us that breathe this mortal air, 
 Or camp in that celestial tent 
 Whose fringes gild our firmament ? 
 
 How vast the workroom where he brought 
 The viewless implements of thought ! 
 The wit how subtle, how profound, 
 That Nature's tangled webs unwound ; 
 
 That through the clouded matrix saw 
 
 The crystal planes of shaping law, 
 
 Through these the sovereign skill that planned, 
 
 The Father's care, the Master's hand ! 
 
 1 From the Atlantic Monthly, by permission of Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin, & Co. 
 
To him the wandering stars revealed 
 The secrets in their cradle sealed : 
 The far-off, frozen sphere that swings 
 Through ether, zoned with lucid rings ; 
 
 The orb that rolls in dim eclipse, 
 Wide wheeling round its long ellipse, 
 His name Urania writes with these, 
 And stamps it on her Pleiades. 
 
 We knew him not ? Ah ! well we knew 
 The manly soul, so brave, so true, 
 The cheerful heart that conquered age, 
 The child-like, silver-bearded sage. 
 
 No more his tireless thought explores 
 The azure sea with golden shores : 
 Rest, wearied frame ! the stars shall keep 
 A loving watch where thou shalt sleep. 
 
 Farewell ! the spirit needs must rise, 
 So long a tenant of the skies, 
 Rise to that home all worlds above 
 Whose sun is God, whose light is love. 
 
 OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. 
 
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